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The Spectator

Index The Spectator

The Spectator is a weekly British magazine on politics, culture, and current affairs. [1]

2149 relations: A Canticle for Leibowitz, A Choice of Kipling's Verse, A Decent Ride, A Defence of Masochism, A Distant Mirror, A Handful of Dust, A History of Christianity: The First Three Thousand Years, A History of English Food, A History of the World in 10½ Chapters, A Midsummer Night's Dream (1935 film), A Mighty Heart, A Moral Reckoning, A Taste of Greece, A Very English Scandal, A. N. Wilson, Aaron Stonehouse, Abingdon (UK Parliament constituency), Absolutely Fabulous: The Movie, Absurdistan, Abu Sufian bin Qumu, Accent on Youth (film), Ace of Aces (horse), Act of Settlement 1701, Action on Smoking and Health, Adam Boulton, Adam Spreadbury-Maher, Adam Zamoyski, Adam's Breed, Adelaide Hall, Adrian Stokes (critic), Aesthetica, Against Equality of Opportunity, Against the Day, Age of Enlightenment, Agnes Mariam de la Croix, Aidan Hartley, Ailsa Garland, Akmal Shaikh, Al Jazeera Balkans, Al Jazeera bombing memo, Al Murray, Aladdin (1992 Disney film), Alain de Botton, Alan Amos, Alan Gibson, Alan Gold (author), Alan Hodge, Alan Judd, Alan Mak (politician), Alan Reid (journalist), ..., Alan Watkins, Alan Williams (novelist), Albert Read (executive), Albert Stanley, 1st Baron Ashfield, Aldershot military prison, Alec Douglas-Home, Alex Bilmes, Alex Brooker, Alex James (musician), Alex Jennings, Alex Massie (journalist), Alex Salmond, Alex Williams (actor), Alexander (Sandro) Antadze, Alexander Allardyce (author), Alexander Chancellor, Alexander Crawford Lamb, Alexander Fiske-Harrison, Alexander Gardner (soldier), Alexander Ryvchin, Alexander Stoddart, Alexander Waugh, Alexander Wilmot Schomberg, Alfred and Emily, Alfred Perceval Graves, Alfred Wilks Drayson, Ali Kemal, Alice (Alice's Adventures in Wonderland), Alice Loane, Alice Meynell, Alice Thomas Ellis, Alice Thomson, Alistair Hicks, Alix Strachey, All in the Mind (novel), Allan Massie, Allegra Stratton, Allie Esiri, Allister Heath, Almanach de Gotha, Alsager Hay Hill, Ambrose Applejohn's Adventure, Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, Ambrose Philips, America Alone, American Catholic Church (1915), Aminatta Forna, Amity Shlaes, Amnesty International, Amongst the Medici, Amr Waked, An Appeal to Reason, An Inspector Calls, Anatol Goldberg, Anatoly Koryagin, Andrée Howard, Andrei Navrozov, Andrew Brown (writer), Andrew Cranston, Andrew Gilligan, Andrew Haldenby, Andrew Hay, 8th Earl of Erroll, Andrew Jefford, Andrew Malcolm (author), Andrew Montford, Andrew Neil, Andrew Roberts (historian), Andrew Robson, Andrew Scull, Andrew Taylor (author), Andrew Weldon, Andrey Goncharenko, Aneurin Bevan, Angela Huth, Anglo-French Financial Commission, Angus MacNeil, Anjelica Huston, Anjem Choudary, Ann Veronica, Anna Adams, Anna Karenina (1935 film), Anna Netrebko, Anne Applebaum, Anne Gallagher, Anne Manning (novelist), Anne Marie Waters, Anne McElvoy, Anne Sebba, Annie Louisa Walker, Another Sunday and Sweet F.A., Anthony Browne (UK politics), Anthony Bushell, Anthony Hartley, Anthony Powell, Anthony Sattin, Anthony Warner (chef), Anti-suffragism, Antoinette Sandbach, Anton Emdin, Arabella Pollen, Archer Thompson Gurney, Archibald Clark Kerr, 1st Baron Inverchapel, Argument from love, Ariadne (poem), Ariane Sherine, Arminius, Arnold Bennett, Arthur Griffith, Arthur Irwin Dasent, Arthur Marshall (broadcaster), Arthur Rowan, Arthur Stratton, Arundel Street, Ash-shab yurid isqat an-nizam, Ashes to Ashes (TV series), Association of Chief Police Officers, Auberon Waugh, Augmented seventh chord, Augustan drama, Augustan prose, Augustus Prinsep, Auschwitz Report (book), Australian Labor Party split of 1955, Avi Shlaim, Ayad Allawi, Émile Bénard, Ba'ath Party, Bahar Mustafa race row, Balfour Declaration, Balham, Gateway to the South, Barbara Amiel, Barbara Euphan Todd, Barbara Noble, Barbara of the House of Grebe, Barbara Toy, Barbary Coast (film), Bare-faced Messiah, Basil Wright, Basket of deplorables, Battersea Bridge, Battle of the Teutoburg Forest, Béla Király, Böhmermann affair, Beauchamp King, Becky Sharp, Bedford (UK Parliament constituency), Beeban Kidron, Behavioral economics, Being Tom Cruise, Bell Pottinger, Ben Kingsley, Ben Stiller, Ben Wallace (politician), Ben Whishaw, Benefits Street, Benjamin Britten, Benjamin Ivry, Benjamin Moran, Beresford Potter, Bernard Cookson, Bernard Gray, Bernard Lee on stage and screen, Bernard Levin, Bert Wiegman, Beth Chatto, Beth Chatto Gardens, Betty Kenward, Beverley (UK Parliament constituency), Bevis Hillier, Bhabani Bhattacharya, Big Society, Bilal Philips, Bill Hillmann, Bill the Bloodhound, Birds in culture, Birdsong (novel), Bitter Lake (film), Black jails, Black Sheep (Hill novel), Blackburn (UK Parliament constituency), Blaming the Victims, Bloomsbury and the Poets, Blowing Up Russia, Bob Seely, Bongo Bongo Land, Bonjour Tristesse, Boris Johnson, Boris Volodarsky, Bouncing Off the Satellites, Bourne Park House, Boys Will Be Boys (film), Brandy filmography, Brandy Norwood, Bread Street Kitchen, Break of Hearts, Breitbart News, Brenda Pye, Brendan O'Neill (journalist), Brian Burland, Brian Hutton, Baron Hutton, Brian Inglis, Brian Moore (novelist), Brian Rix, Brief Lives, Britain's Great War, Britannia Coco-nut Dancers, British expedition to Tibet, British Nigerian, British propaganda during World War II, Broadcast (band), Brookeborough, Brother Sun, Sister Moon, Bruce Anderson (columnist), Bryan Appleyard, Bryan Forbes, Burton upon Trent, C. Fox Smith, Cage (organization), Cal McCrystal, Calabash International Literary Festival, Cambridgeshire and Peterborough mayoral election, 2017, Camden Town Group, Camila Batmanghelidjh, Canada Pavilion, British Empire Exhibition, Candide, Canterbury (UK Parliament constituency), Cantor Fitzgerald, Captain Beaky and His Band, CapX, Carmarthen Public Rooms, Carol Reed, Caroline Lucas, Caroline Molesworth, Caroline Moorehead, Carroll Carstairs, Carsten Peter Thiede, Caryl Churchill, Cases of political abuse of psychiatry in the Soviet Union, Cass Sunstein, Castle Bromwich Assembly, Catch a Fire, Cate McGregor, Catholic literary revival, Catsuits and bodysuits in popular media, Causes of the 1948 Palestinian exodus, Cécile (novel), Central University (Colombia), Centre for Social Cohesion, Cereal Killer Cafe, Charles Arnold-Baker, Charles Bowen, Baron Bowen, Charles Clore, Charles Dickens, Charles Glass, Charles Henry Pearson, Charles John Cornish, Charles Moore (journalist), Charles Thomas Whitmell, Charles Vince, Charles Walker (British politician), Charles William Heckethorn, Charlie Johnson in the Flames, Charlie Phillips (photographer), Charlotte Metcalf, Charterhouse School, Chef's Table at Brooklyn Fare, Children in Need, Chinley, Choisir, Chris Finlayson, Chris Gollon, Chris Patten, Chris Steele-Perkins, Christian Kerr, Christian Mary McEwen, Christina Patterson, Christopher Booker, Christopher Gibbs, Christopher MacLehose, Christopher Ondaatje, Christopher Sykes (author), Christopher Ward (journalist), Church of St Mary the Virgin, Ashwell, Cigar, Cincinnati riots of 1884, Cisgender, Civic conservatism, Claire Lehmann, Clare Mulley, Claud Morris, Clean eating, Clemency Burton-Hill, Clerihew, Clive Barnes, Closenberg Hotel, Codename Villanelle, Colchester High School, Cold Feet (series 5), Colin Wilson, Colindale tube station, Come Out of the Pantry, Comic Relief, Committee for a Free Britain, Company K, Comprised of, Con Coughlin, Conchita Cintrón, Conservapedia, Conservative Party (UK) leadership election, 1975, Constance Howell, Controversies surrounding Silvio Berlusconi, Convoy PQ 17, Corn Laws, Cornelius Denvir, Coronation of Queen Victoria, Cosmo Landesman, Court of Session, Craig Brown (satirist), Craig Murray, Criterion Restaurant, Criticism of communist party rule, Criticism of Human Rights Watch, Criticism of the BBC, Criticism of the National Health Service (England), Crown Colony of Malta, Cryptic crossword, CTB v News Group Newspapers Ltd, Cultural relationship between the Welsh and the English, Current affairs (news format), Curse of Scotland, Cyberbully (2015 film), Cyril Ray, D. J. Taylor, Dai Bradley, Daily Mail, Daily Politics, Dame Edna Everage, Damian Thompson, Damien McCrystal, Dan Hodges, Dan Rabkin, Daniel Hannan, Daniel Korski, Dariel, Darius Guppy, Darlan (horse), Dates (TV series), Dave Goulson, Dave Nellist, David Aaronovitch, David and Frederick Barclay, David Astor, David Blunkett, David Burrowes, David Cairns (writer), David Carritt, David Cox (artist), David Heathcoat-Amory, David Inshaw, David Messer, David Mitchell (author), David Morley (writer), David Peat (Royal Navy officer), David Pryce-Jones, David Ramsbotham, Baron Ramsbotham, David René de Rothschild, David Rennie (columnist), David Russell (barrister), David Shayler, David Steen (photographer), David Szalay, David Tress, David Willetts, Dean Bertram, Dean Godson, Death of Alan Kurdi, Deaths in December 2006, Deaths in January 2017, Deborah Bull, Deborah Cavendish, Duchess of Devonshire, Deborah Ross (journalist), December 1915, December 1930, Deep South: Four Seasons on Back Roads, Denise Dorrance, Dennis Parry, Deobandi, Department of Journalism, City University, Derek Savage (poet), Desmond Ackner, Baron Ackner, Desperate Remedies, Destiny, or The Attraction of Affinities, Dhiren Bhagat, Diana Mitford, Diane Abbott, Diaries 1969–1979: The Python Years, Digby Anderson, Dinting Viaduct, Dizzy Heights, Dmitri Shostakovich, Doctor Aybolit, Doctor Dido, Doctor Ox's Experiment (opera), Dollar Academy, Dollar, Clackmannanshire, Dom Joly, Dominic Cummings, Dominic Frisby, Dominic Lawson, Dominic Raab, Dominic Selwood, Don Manley, Donald F. Bond, Donald Hankey, Donald Rooum, Donald Sinclair (hotel owner), Dood Water, Dorothea Mackellar, Dorothy Cowlin, Dorothy King, Dorothy L. Sayers, Dorset Opera Festival, Double Falsehood, Doughty Street, Douglas Carswell, Douglas Coupland, Douglas Murray (author), Dugald Sutherland MacColl, Duke of Denver, Duncan Fallowell, Dylan Jones, Dylan Thomas, Dyneley Hussey, E. B. C. Jones, E. Beresford Chancellor, E. W. Hornung, Eamon Delaney, East India Arms, Eclipse of the Sun (novel), Ed Balls document leak, Ed Waugh and Trevor Wood, Ed West (journalist), Edgar Lustgarten, Edith Charlotte Brown, Edith Pechey, Edmond Modeste Lescarbault, EdStone, Education in Sweden, Edward Adeane, Edward Atiyah, Edward Auchmuty Glover, Edward Chaney, Edward Dicey, Edward Greenfield, Edward Russell, 26th Baron de Clifford, Edward Taylor (music writer), Edwin James (barrister), El Sistema, Elaine Paige, Eleanor Beardsley, Eliza Acton, Elizabeth David, Elizabeth David bibliography, Elizabeth R: A Year in the Life of the Queen, Elizabeth Truss, Elspeth Douglas McClelland, Emilie Barrington, Emily Hester Brodrick, Emily Maitlis, Emma Gilbey Keller, Emmelie de Forest, Empathizing–systemizing theory, Empress Dowager Cixi, Encounter (magazine), Endorsements in the Labour Party (UK) leadership election, 2015, Endorsements in the United Kingdom European Union membership referendum, 2016, Endorsements in the United Kingdom general election, 2010, Endorsements in the United Kingdom general election, 2015, Endorsements in the United Kingdom general election, 2017, English independence, English National Opera, English people, Episode (film), Erasmus Darwin Barlow, Erema, Eric Ellis (journalist), Eric Hobsbawm, Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn, Erskine Barton Childers, Ethel Anderson, Ethel Proudlock case, Eton College, Eugene Chantrelle, Euston Arch, Euthanasia, Eva Schmidt-Kolmer, Evelyn Herlitzius, Evelyn Underhill, Evelyn Waugh, Evelyn Wrench, Exact Editions, Exodus: How Migration Is Changing Our World, Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close, Eyes Without a Face, Ezra Nawi, F. L. Lucas, Fabian Society, Fabrice Bollon, Faculty of History, University of Oxford, Family of Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, Faringdon, Faringdon House, Fawlty Towers, Fay Weldon, Felicity Dean, Felix Felton, Fen Tigers, Fences and Windows, Feral (Monbiot book), Florence Caddy, Florence Hayward (writer), Florence Nagle, For Your Eyes Only (short story collection), Forest Whitaker, Fort Belvedere, Surrey, Four Men in Prison, Fowler's match, François Georges-Picot, Frances Cashel Hoey, Frances Wynne, Francis Davison, Francis Godolphin Waldron, Francis Hyett, Francis Johnson (architect), Francis Pike, Francis Stacey, Francis Yeats-Brown, Franciszek Bohomolec, Frank Crisp, Frank Johnson (journalist), Frank Keating (journalist), Frank Laskier, Frank Maguire (politician), Frank Schuster (music patron), Franz Cramer, Fraser Nelson, Freddie Mercury, Frederick Lucas, Frederick Peisley, Frederick Wedmore, Freedom Press, From Bryan to Stalin, From Here to Eternity the Musical, Frome by-election, 1854, Front Row (radio), Gaberbocchus Press, Gabriel Gbadamosi, Gabriela Trzebinski, Gabriele Annan, Gas Stokers' strike, Gavin Mortimer, Gay Life (TV series), GCE Ordinary Level (United Kingdom), Generation Snowflake, Generation War, Geoffrey Wheatcroft, Geographical (magazine), Geology of Scotland, George Bell (bishop), George Brimley, George Chichester, 5th Marquess of Donegall, George Gale (journalist), George Galloway, George Grote, George Grove, George Hall (British administrator), George Hay, 3rd Earl of Kinnoull, George Hay, 5th Earl of Kinnoull, George Hay, 7th Earl of Erroll, George Hay, 8th Earl of Kinnoull, George Hayne, George Hussey Packe, George McCoy, George Monbiot, George Orwell bibliography, George Smart (tailor), George Smiley, George Worsley Adamson, Georgia Flood, Gerald FitzGibbon (Irish lawyer), Gerald Hamilton, Gerald Warner, Geraldine McEwan, Gertrude Atherton, Get Britain Out, Gezi Park protests, Gideon Haigh, Gilad Atzmon, Gilbert Beyfus, Giles Gordon, Girl Pat, Gita Sahgal, Giza Plateau, Glan Williams, Glasgow University Guardian, Glen Tilt, Global warming conspiracy theory, Globalization, Go Set a Watchman, Godalming College, Goronwy Rees, Graham Brady, Graham Greene, Graham Russell Mitchell, Grandma (film), Great God Gold, Great Leap Forward, Greenways School, Greenwich (UK Parliament constituency), Gregorio Pietro Agagianian, Greville Poke, Grimeborn, Guardians of Power, Guatoque - Veraguas (TransMilenio), Guy Scott, H. H. Asquith, H. J. Massingham, Hal Gibson Pateshall Colebatch, Halla Diyab, Hamlet (Dean), Hangover Square, Hannah Mary Rothschild, Hans Heinrich Thyssen-Bornemisza, Hapgood (play), Hard Cash (novel), Hardeep Singh Kohli, Hark, Hark! The Dogs Do Bark, Harold Creighton, Harold Nicolson, Harriet Harman, Harry Becker (artist), Harry Bucknall, Harry Cole (journalist), Harry Diamond (photographer), Harry Eyres, Harry Hammond, Harry Quilter, Harry Stirling Crawfurd Everard, Hattie Jacques, Haus Vaterland, Have I Got News for You, Hazel Blears, Heaven and Earth (book), Heffalump, Heidi Allen, Helen Hinsdale Rich, Helen Zimmern, Henrietta Keddie, Henry Andrade Harben, Henry Cartwright, Henry Daly, Henry Dircks, Henry Fairlie, Henry Goldfinch, Henry James, Henry Keswick (businessman), Henry Southern (journalist), Henry Strachey (artist), Henry Watson Fowler, Henry William Massingham, Hermione Eyre, Hermione, Countess of Ranfurly, Hilary Mantel, Hilda Matheson, Hillsborough disaster, History of American newspapers, History of Durham University, History of the Ba'ath Party, History of the National Health Service (England), Hitch-22, HM Prison Pentonville, Ho Yi, Holland Park School, Holy Tango of Literature, Homage to Catalonia, Home counties, Home Front (BBC radio series), Horatio Clare, Horrible Histories (2009 TV series), Horse Outside, Hot Summer Night (play), How to Be a Conservative, How to Clone a Mammoth, How to Eat, How to Lose Friends & Alienate People (film), Howard Staunton, Hugh Dowding, Hugh Gilbert, Hugh Kearney, Hugh Massingberd, Hugh Trevor-Roper, Hugo Rifkind, Hugo Williams, Humphry Sandwith, Hunger (memoir), Hyatt Regency London – The Churchill, Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, HyperNormalisation, Iain Dale, Iain Hamilton (journalist), Iain Macleod, Iain Overton, Ian Cobain, Ian Dunlop, Ian Fleming Publications, Ian Gilmour, Baron Gilmour of Craigmillar, Ian Marber, Ian McIntyre, Ian Paisley, Ian Thomson (writer), Ibn Warraq, IdeasTap, Identity Cards Act 2006, In Flanders Fields, In Praise of Limestone, Ina Skriver, Incel, Independent Jewish Voices (Canada), India: The Rise of an Asian Giant, India–Pakistan relations, Indra's net, Information Research Department, Inkle and Yarico, Insects in literature, Inspector Ghote's First Case, Inspirations for James Bond, Institut Le Rosey, Institute for Fiscal Studies, Institute of Public Affairs, Intellectual, International Life Assurance Society, International Who's Who, Iran nuclear deal framework, Irene Byers, Iris Barry, Iris Birtwistle, Iris tingitana, Irish Council Bill, Irish Metropolitan Conservative Society, Iron Foot Jack, Isabel Hardman, Isabel Oakeshott, Isabel Quigly, Isabella Valancy Crawford, Islam: The Untold Story, Islamic Human Rights Commission, Islamofascism, Israel, Palestine, and the United Nations, J. D. Beresford, J. P. W. Mallalieu, J.Lo by Jennifer Lopez, Jack Buckby, Jack Holland (writer), Jacki Randall, Jacob Rees-Mogg, Jacyn Heavens, Jad Adams, Jailhouse Rock (film), James Bloodworth (journalist), James Bolivar Manson, James Bond uncollected and other miscellaneous short stories, James Brooke, James Campbell (journalist), James Cleverly, James Delingpole, James Dutton (Royal Marines officer), James Evans (historian), James Forsyth (journalist), James Hain Friswell, James Heappey, James Hutton, James Kirchick, James Le Fanu, James Michie, James O'Brien (broadcaster), James Pope-Hennessy, James Stourton, James Strachey, James Thomson (minister), Jamie Bartlett (journalist), Jane Joseph, Jane Mulvagh, Jane Ridley, Janet Baker, Janet Daley, Janet Ross, Jani Allan, Jankers, January 1923, Jap, Jascha Spivakovsky, Jason Cowley, Je suis Charlie, Jean Bolikango, Jean-Michel Defaye, Jeddah massacre of 1858, Jeffery Day, Jeffrey Bernard, Jeffrey Bernard Is Unwell, Jenni Russell, Jennifer Caron Hall, Jennifer Marohasy, Jennifer Paterson, Jenny from the Block, Jenny Taylor, Jeremy Catto, Jeremy Corbyn, Jeremy Thorpe, Jesse Norman, Jessie Burton, Jihadi John, Jimmy Savile, Jo-Anne Nadler, Joan Collins, Joan of Arc (1935 film), Joanna Coles, Joanna Kavenna, Joanna Moorhead, Joaquim Joseph A. Campos, Joash Woodrow, Johann Hari, John Black Atkins, John Bourn, John Bradburne, John Buchan, John Casey (academic), John Chancellor (colonial administrator), John Cleese, John Crawfurd, John D. Hamaker, John Davenport (critic), John Fraser (journalist), John Gielgud, John Glashan, John Gray (philosopher), John Gribbin, John Grigg, 2nd Baron Altrincham, John Gross, John Home Home, John Hooper (journalist), John Ingram Lockhart (writer), John Inverdale, John J. Studzinski, John Jay Mortimer, John King, Baron King of Wartnaby, John Lang (writer), John Langton Sanford, John Laughland, John Lennox, John Lewis-Stempel, John Michell (writer), John Morgan (British journalist), John Mulcaster Carrick, John O'Sullivan (columnist), John Osborne, John Oxx, John Pilger, John R. Bradley, John Spencer Login, John Strachey (journalist), John Strachey (politician), John Thackara, John Thomas (bishop of Salisbury), John Wade (author), John Whittingdale, John Woodcock (politician), Joi Bangla, Jolly Fellows, Jonas Kaufmann, Jonathan Bate, Jonathan Cecil, Jonathan Davis (journalist), Jonathan King, Jonathan Meades, Jonathan Pugh, Jonathan Ruffer, Jonathan Sumption, Lord Sumption, Jonathan Tisdall, Jordan Peterson, Joseph Addison, Joseph Arch, Joseph Haythorne Reed, Joseph Jorkens, Joseph Lee (poet), Joseph Thackwell, Journalists of the Balkan Wars, Judith Flanders, Julian Assange, Julian Brazier, Julian Burnside, Julian Gloag, Julie Powell, Juliet, Naked, Julieta (film), July 1965, Kajaki Dam, Karachi, Karl Miller, Kate Reardon, Kate Royal, Kate Williams (historian), Katerina Wilczynski, Kathleen Nott, Katy Brand, Kay Dick, Keith Coventry, Keith Dewhurst, Keith Kyle, Keith Waithe, Keith Windschuttle, Kemi Badenoch, Ken Livingstone, Ken: The Ups and Downs of Ken Livingstone, Kenneth Bigley, Kenneth H. Ashley, Kenneth Horne, Kensington Palace Gardens, Kevin Hollinrake, Kevin Maher (writer), Kevin Woodcock, Kids Company, Kiln Theatre, Kimberly Quinn, Kind Hearts and Coronets, King Creole, Kingcraft, Kingdoms of Elfin, Kipper Williams, Kit and Kitty, Kitchen Cabinet (TV series), Kleptocracy Tour, Knowing Me Knowing You with Alan Partridge (TV series), Koh-i-Noor: The History of the World's Most Infamous Diamond, Koo Stark, Ksenija Pavlovic, Kurt Enoch, Kyllachy, La Bandera (film), La Belle Sauvage, La Foce, Lady Juliet Townsend, Lady Margaret Sackville, Lamarckism, Lamentation (novel), Langholm Capital, Larry Taunton, Laura Cumming, Laura Kuenssberg, Laurence Stern fellowship, Laurens van der Post, Laurie Lee, Law & Order (UK TV series), Leah McLaren, Len Doherty, Lenore Coffee, Leo Gradwell, Leo McKinstry, Leofranc Holford-Strevens, Les dragons de Villars, Leslie Finer, Lewis K. Bush, Lewis Nkosi, Liam Halligan, Liberal Democrats (UK), Liberal elite, Liberation theology, Licence to Kill, Life's Little Ironies, Lifestyle guru, Light poetry, Like a Conquered Province, Lilian Bowes Lyon, Lilian Gask, Lina Eckenstein, Lincoln by-election, 1973, Lionel Davidson, Lisa Hilton (writer), Lisa Tyrrell, List of 19th-century British periodicals, List of atheist authors, List of atheists (surnames L to M), List of baritones in non-classical music, List of Bilderberg participants, List of British Jewish politicians, List of cricket commentators, List of cultural icons of England, List of deaths from drug overdose and intoxication, List of endorsements in the Scottish independence referendum, 2014, List of expenses claims in the United Kingdom parliamentary expenses scandal, List of Gateshead blue plaques, List of grenade attacks in Sweden, List of iconic photographs, List of Jewish American authors, List of Libyan detainees at Guantanamo Bay, List of magazines in the United Kingdom, List of Mayoites, List of most expensive films, List of newspaper columnists, List of nicknames of Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom, List of Old Boys of St Aloysius' College, List of Old Etonians born in the 20th century, List of Old Gowers, List of people associated with University College London, List of people from Nottingham, List of political magazines, List of political scandals in the United Kingdom, List of Q&A panelists, List of rampage killers (Asia), List of songs about or referencing Syd Barrett, List of The Thick of It characters, List of University of Glasgow people, List of works by Clough Williams-Ellis, List of works by Dorothy L. Sayers, List of works by H. Rider Haggard, List of works by John Buchan, Listen to Britain, Literary costumbrismo, Literary magazine, Lizzie Loudon, Lobby Hero, Logie Bruce Lockhart, London mayoral election, 2016, London School of Economics, Look Up and Laugh, Lord Berners, Lord Edward Thynne, Lord John Scott, Lord Peter Wimsey, Lorna Doone (1990 film), Lost Horizon (1937 film), Louisa Baring, Lady Ashburton, Louise Cooper (financial analyst), Louise Stern, Love letter, Love Me Forever, Lucrezia Borgia, Lucy Beresford, Lucy Riall, Lucy Wadham, Luke Harding, Lulu (opera), Lynton Crosby, Lytton Strachey, Lytton Strachey: A Critical Biography, M. J. Hyland, M. R. D. Foot, Mabel McConnell Fitzgerald, Macha Rosenthal, Mad Love (1935 film), Madison Cawein, Maev Alexander, Mail robbery, Malcolm Tucker, Malia Bouattia, Maltese United Kingdom integration referendum, 1956, Man on the Flying Trapeze, Mannenberg, Mao Zedong, Mao's Great Famine, Mao: The Unknown Story, María del Carmen, Marc Sinden, Marcus Bastiaan, Marcus Berkmann, Maremmano, Margaret Beckett, Margaret Fingerhut, Margaret Thatcher, Margot Wallström, Marian Maguire, Marie Breen Smyth, Marie Corelli, Marie-Hortense Fiquet, Marius Lyle, Mark Childress, Mark Forsyth, Mark Juddery, Mark Law, Mark Malloch Brown, Baron Malloch-Brown, Mark Spencer (British politician), Mark Steyn, Mark Strauss (journalist), Marriage bar, Marthe Armitage, Martin Adolf Bormann, Martin Amis, Martin Bright, Martin Charteris, Baron Charteris of Amisfield, Martin Durkin (television director), Martin Hoffman (bridge), Martin Short (author), Martin Vander Weyer, Martin Wiener, Mary and Catherine Lee, Mary Anerley, Mary Berry (writer, born 1763), Mary Eliza Kennard, Mary Kenny, Mary Kissel, Mary Whitehouse, Matilda of Hungary, Matt Cavanagh, Matt Lynn, Matt Nixson, Matt Percival, Matt Pritchett, Matthew Corbally, Matthew Curtis (composer), Matthew d'Ancona, Matthew Orr, Matthew Parris, Matthew Stadlen, Maudie Littlehampton, Maurice Cowling, Maurice Healy (writer), Maurice Newman, Max Benitz, Max Hastings, Max Pemberton (doctor), Maximos V Hakim, Maya Jasanoff, Mayor of London, Me and Marlborough, Media of the United Kingdom, Media portrayal of the Ukrainian crisis, Medway News, Melanie Phillips, Melissa Kite, Memoirs of a Dervish, Memoirs of My Life and Writings, Mental health in Russia, Meredith Townsend, Merryn Somerset Webb, Michael Argyle (judge), Michael Baigent, Michael Billington (critic), Michael Connarty, Michael Crick, Michael ffolkes, Michael Freedland, Michael Gove, Michael Heath (cartoonist), Michael Henderson (writer), Michael Heseltine, Michael Howard, Michael I of Romania, Michael Knighton, Michael Lewis, Michael Madhusudan Dutt, Michael Moran (journalist), Michael Nyman, Michael Paraskos, Michael Roemer, Michael Trend, Michael Wynn-Jones, Michael Young, Baron Young of Dartington, Michelle Donelan, Middle-class values, Middlemarch, Middlesex (novel), Midnight Man (miniseries), Midshipman Easy, Mimi (film), Mimi Spencer, Miners' International Federation, Minnow on the Say (novel), Mirabelle (London restaurant), Mirella Ricciardi, Miriam Gross, Miron Grindea, Misandry, Mo Ansar, Modern Cookery for Private Families, Monarchism, Monica Furlong, Montague Haltrecht, Moonbat, Moonlight (2016 film), Moonraker (novel), Mordaunt Shairp, Morgan Phillips, Morris Bishop, Mortara case, Moscow Nights (film), Mount Ararat, Mrs. Bridge, Muhammad: His Life Based on the Earliest Sources, Murder of Muriel McKay, Murder of Simon Dale, Murphy's law, Muscular liberalism, Museum of Croydon, Museum of Sex, Musicians of the RMS Titanic, My Childhood (Gorky book), My Country, My Life in Orange, Nadine Dorries, Nairn, Nairn Academy, Nanny state, Naomie Harris, Narmadashankar Dave, National Health Service (England), National symbols of England, Nazir Ahmed, Baron Ahmed, Neil Balfour, Neil Brown (Australian politician), Neil Hamilton (politician), Nesta Wyn Ellis, New Classical architecture, New Inn Hall, New Reformation, New Social Alliance, New Statesman, New Zealand Company, News magazine, News UK, Nicholas Budgen, Nicholas Burgess Farrell, Nicholas Coleridge, Nicholas Garland, Nicholas Newman, Nicholas Ridley, Baron Ridley of Liddesdale, Nick Cater, Nick Cohen, Nick Davies, Nick Groom, Nick Newman, Nicky Crane, Nicky Haslam, Nigel Farage, Nigel Farndale, Nigel H. Jones, Nigel Lawson, Nigel Mills, Nigel Nicolson, Nigel Rees, Nigel Short, Nigella Lawson, Night Is Darkest, Night of January 16th, Nightmares Fear Factory, Nikolay Novikov, Nimrod Kamer, Nina Munk, Ninth Doctor, No More Ladies, No Pressure (film), Noblesse Oblige (book), Noel Malcolm, Noel Skelton, Norah C. James, Norman Baker, Norman Lebrecht, Norman Rosenthal, Norman Tebbit, Northanger Abbey (2007 film), Northern & Shell, Nothing Like a Dame, Nottingham Post, Ntokozo Qwabe, Nudge theory, Octopussy and The Living Daylights, Oil for the Lamps of China (film), Old Dunstonian Association, Oldham West and Royton by-election, 2015, Olga Georges-Picot, Olive Mudie-Cooke, Oliver Preston, Oliver Warner, Olivia Cole (poet), Olivia Manning, Olivia Sudjic, Olof von Dalin, On the Buses (film), On the Yankee Station, One New York Night, Open Europe, Operation Yewtree, Ordinary Dreams; or How to Survive a Meltdown with Flair, Organised Independents, Osbert Lancaster, Oscar Humphries, Our Friends in the North, Our Last Best Chance, Ourselves Alone (film), Outsiders (Australian TV program), Owen Green, Owen Oyston, Ox-Tales, Oxbridge, Oxford University Conservative Association, OZ (magazine), P. H. B. Lyon, P. J. 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Expand index (2099 more) »

A Canticle for Leibowitz

A Canticle for Leibowitz is a post-apocalyptic science fiction novel by American writer Walter M. Miller Jr., first published in 1959.

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A Choice of Kipling's Verse

A Choice of Kipling's Verse, made by T. S. Eliot, with an essay on Rudyard Kipling is a book first published in December 1941 (by Faber and Faber in UK, and by Charles Scribner's Sons in U.S.A.). It is in two parts.

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A Decent Ride

A Decent Ride is a 2015 novel by Irvine Welsh.

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A Defence of Masochism

A Defence of Masochism is a 1998 non-fiction book by Anita Phillips covering the topic of BDSM, which offers philosophical and sociological arguments for the virtues of masochism.

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A Distant Mirror

A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century is a narrative history book by the American historian Barbara Tuchman, first published by Alfred A. Knopf in 1978.

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A Handful of Dust

A Handful of Dust is a novel by the British writer Evelyn Waugh.

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A History of Christianity: The First Three Thousand Years

A History of Christianity: The First Three Thousand Years is a 2009 book by the British ecclesiastical historian Diarmaid MacCulloch.

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A History of English Food

A History of English Food is a history of English cuisine from the Middle Ages to the end of the twentieth century written by the celebrity cook Clarissa Dickson Wright.

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A History of the World in 10½ Chapters

A History of the World in 10½ Chapters is a novel by Julian Barnes published in 1989.

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A Midsummer Night's Dream (1935 film)

A Midsummer Night's Dream is a 1935 American romance fantasy film of William Shakespeare's play, directed by Max Reinhardt and William Dieterle, and starring James Cagney, Mickey Rooney, Olivia de Havilland, Jean Muir, Joe E. Brown, Dick Powell, Ross Alexander, Anita Louise, Victor Jory and Ian Hunter.

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A Mighty Heart

A Mighty Heart: The Brave Life and Death of My Husband Daniel Pearl (also subtitled A Mighty Heart: The Inside Story of the Al Qaeda Kidnapping of Danny Pearl) (2003) is a memoir by Mariane Pearl, a freelance French journalist.

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A Moral Reckoning

A Moral Reckoning: The Role of the Catholic Church in the Holocaust and Its Unfulfilled Duty of Repair is a 2003 book by Daniel Jonah Goldhagen, previously the author or Hitler's Willing Executioners (1996).

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A Taste of Greece

A Taste of Greece: Recipes, Cuisine & Culture is an illustrated cookbook coordinated by Princess Tatiana of Greece and edited by the food writer Diana Farr Louis.

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A Very English Scandal

A Very English Scandal is a true crime non-fiction novel by author John Preston.

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A. N. Wilson

Andrew Norman Wilson (born 1950) is an English writer and newspaper columnist known for his critical biographies, novels and works of popular history.

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Aaron Stonehouse

Aaron Stonehouse (born 29 June 1990) is an Australian politician.

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Abingdon (UK Parliament constituency)

Abingdon was a constituency of the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom (and its predecessor institutions for England and Great Britain), electing one Member of Parliament (MP) from 1558 until 1983.

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Absolutely Fabulous: The Movie

Absolutely Fabulous: The Movie is a 2016 British female buddy comedy film directed by Mandie Fletcher and written by Jennifer Saunders, based on the television show Absolutely Fabulous.

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Absurdistan

Absurdistan is a term sometimes used to satirically describe a country in which absurdity is the norm, especially in its public authorities and government.

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Abu Sufian bin Qumu

Abu Sufian Ibrahim Ahmed Hamuda Bin Qumu (أبو سفيان إبراهيم أحمد حمودة بن قمو, born 26 June 1959) is a citizen of Libya who was held in extrajudicial detention in the United States Guantanamo Bay detention camps, in Cuba.

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Accent on Youth (film)

Accent on Youth is a 1935 American comedy film directed by Wesley Ruggles and written by Herbert Fields and Claude Binyon.

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Ace of Aces (horse)

Ace of Aces (1970 – 26 March 1992) was an American-bred French-trained Thoroughbred racehorse and sire.

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Act of Settlement 1701

The Act of Settlement is an Act of the Parliament of England that was passed in 1701 to settle the succession to the English and Irish crowns on Protestants only.

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Action on Smoking and Health

Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) is the name of a number of autonomous pressure groups (charities) that seek to publicise the risks associated with tobacco smoking and campaign for greater restrictions on cigarette and tobacco sales.

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Adam Boulton

Thomas Adam Babington Boulton (born 15 February 1959) is a British journalist and broadcaster who is currently the Editor-at-large of Sky News, and presenter of All Out Politics & Week In Review.

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Adam Spreadbury-Maher

Adam Spreadbury-Maher is an Australian/Irish theatre artistic director, producer and writer.

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Adam Zamoyski

Adam Zamoyski is an American-born British historian author.

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Adam's Breed

Adam's Breed was a 1926 novel by the English writer Radclyffe Hall.

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Adelaide Hall

Adelaide Louise Hall (20 October 1901 – 7 November 1993) was an American–born UK–based jazz singer and entertainer.

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Adrian Stokes (critic)

Adrian Stokes (27 October 1902 – 15 December 1972) was a British writer and painter, known principally as an influential art critic.

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Aesthetica

Aesthetica is an international art and culture magazine, founded in 2002.

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Against Equality of Opportunity

Against Equality of Opportunity is a 2002 book by Matt Cavanagh.

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Against the Day

Against the Day is a 2006 historical novel by Thomas Pynchon.

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Age of Enlightenment

The Enlightenment (also known as the Age of Enlightenment or the Age of Reason; in lit in Aufklärung, "Enlightenment", in L’Illuminismo, “Enlightenment” and in Spanish: La Ilustración, "Enlightenment") was an intellectual and philosophical movement that dominated the world of ideas in Europe during the 18th century, "The Century of Philosophy".

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Agnes Mariam de la Croix

Mother Superior Agnes Mariam de la Croix (born 1952), also known as Mother Agnes, is a Christian nun.

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Aidan Hartley

Aidan Hartley (born 1965) is a writer and entrepreneur.

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Ailsa Garland

Ailsa Garland (1917–1982) was a British fashion journalist.

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Akmal Shaikh

Akmal Shaikh (5 April 1956 – 29 December 2009) was a Pakistani-British businessman who was convicted and executed in China for drug trafficking.

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Al Jazeera Balkans

Al Jazeera Balkans (AJB) is an international news television station headquartered in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina aimed at the media markets of the countries that used to be constituent units of SFR Yugoslavia.

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Al Jazeera bombing memo

The Al Jazeera bombing memo is an unpublished memorandum made within the British government which is said to be the minutes of a discussion between United States President George W. Bush and Prime Minister Tony Blair.

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Al Murray

Alastair James Hay Murray (born 10 May 1968), is an English comedian and TV personality.

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Aladdin (1992 Disney film)

Aladdin is a 1992 American animated musical romantic comedy fantasy adventure film produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation and released by Walt Disney Pictures.

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Alain de Botton

Alain de Botton, FRSL (born 20 December 1969) is a Swiss-born British philosopher and author.

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Alan Amos

Alan Thomas Amos (born 10 November 1952) is a British politician, currently a Conservative (formerly Labour) councillor and Mayor (2014-2015) of Worcester City Council.

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Alan Gibson

Norman Alan Stewart Gibson (28 May 1923 at Sheffield, Yorkshire – 10 April 1997 at Taunton, Somerset) was an English journalist, writer and radio broadcaster, best known for his work in connection with cricket, though he also sometimes covered football and rugby union.

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Alan Gold (author)

Alan David Gold (born 1945) is an internationally published and translated novelist, columnist and human rights activist.

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Alan Hodge

Alan Hodge (16 October 1915 – 25 May 1979) was an English historian and journalist.

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Alan Judd

Alan Judd is a pseudonym used by Alan Edwin Petty.

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Alan Mak (politician)

Alan Mak (born 1984) is a British Conservative Party politician who was elected as the Member of Parliament (MP) for the Havant constituency in Hampshire in 2015.

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Alan Reid (journalist)

Alan Douglas Joseph Reid (19 December 19141 September 1987), nicknamed the Red Fox, was an Australian political journalist, who worked in the Federal Parliamentary Press Gallery from 1937 to 1985.

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Alan Watkins

Alan Rhun Watkins (3 April 1933 – 8 May 2010) was for over 50 years a British political columnist in various London-based magazines and newspapers.

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Alan Williams (novelist)

Alan Emlyn Williams (born 28 August 1935) is an ex-foreign correspondent, novelist and writer of thrillers.

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Albert Read (executive)

Albert Nathaniel Read (born January 1970) is the Managing Director of Condé Nast Britain.

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Albert Stanley, 1st Baron Ashfield

Albert Henry Stanley, 1st Baron Ashfield, (8 August 1874 – 4 November 1948), born Albert Henry Knattriess, was a British-American businessman who was managing director, then chairman of the Underground Electric Railways Company of London (UERL) from 1910 to 1933 and chairman of the London Passenger Transport Board (LPTB) from 1933 to 1947.

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Aldershot military prison

Aldershot military prison, known as the Glasshouse on account of its glazed roof, was the military prison in Aldershot in Hampshire from 1870 until it was burned down during riots in February 1946 and was finally demolished in 1958.

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Alec Douglas-Home

Alexander Frederick Douglas-Home, Baron Home of the Hirsel, (2 July 1903 – 9 October 1995) was a British statesman of the Conservative Party who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from October 1963 to October 1964.

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Alex Bilmes

Alex Bilmes is a British journalist.

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Alex Brooker

Alexander James Brooker (born 15 May 1984) is an English journalist, presenter and comedian best known for his television work with Channel 4.

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Alex James (musician)

Steven Alexander James FRSA (born 21 November 1968) is an English musician and songwriter, as well as a journalist and cheesemaker.

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Alex Jennings

Alex Jennings (born 10 May 1957) is an English actor, who has worked extensively with the Royal Shakespeare Company and National Theatre.

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Alex Massie (journalist)

Alex Massie (born 1 July 1974) is a Scottish freelance journalist commentator based in Edinburgh.

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Alex Salmond

Alexander Elliot Anderson Salmond (born 31 December 1954) is a Scottish politician who served as the First Minister of Scotland from 2007 to 2014.

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Alex Williams (actor)

Alex Williams is an Australian actor who played the lead role of Julian Assange in the 2012 television film Underground: The Julian Assange Story.

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Alexander (Sandro) Antadze

Alexander (Sandro) Antadze (born May 5, 1972 in Tbilisi, Georgia) is an artist and an architect.

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Alexander Allardyce (author)

Alexander Allardyce (21 January 1846 – 23 April 1896) was a Scottish author, journalist and historian.

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Alexander Chancellor

Alexander Surtees Chancellor, CBE (4 January 1940 – 28 January 2017) was a British journalist.

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Alexander Crawford Lamb

Alexander Crawford Lamb (21 February 1843 – 29 April 1897) was a Scottish hotelier, art collector, antiquarian and writer.

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Alexander Fiske-Harrison

Alexander Rupert Fiske-Harrison (born 22 July 1976) is an English prize-winning author and journalist, broadcaster and conservationist.

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Alexander Gardner (soldier)

Alexander Haughton Campbell Gardner (or Gardiner) (Gordana Khan) (1785–1877) was a traveller, soldier and mercenary.

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Alexander Ryvchin

Alexander (Alex) Ryvchin (born 18 July 1983) is an Australian Jewish writer, advocate, commentator, and lawyer.

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Alexander Stoddart

Alexander "Sandy" Stoddart (born 1959) is a Scottish sculptor, who, since 2008, has been the Queen's Sculptor in Ordinary in Scotland.

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Alexander Waugh

Alexander Evelyn Michael Waugh (born 1963) is an English eccentric, businessman, writer, critic, journalist, composer, cartoonist, record producer and television presenter.

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Alexander Wilmot Schomberg

Admiral Alexander Wilmot Schomberg (24 February 1774 – 13 January 1850) was an officer of the British Royal Navy who served during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars.

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Alfred and Emily

Alfred and Emily is a book by Doris Lessing in a new hybrid form.

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Alfred Perceval Graves

Alfred Perceval Graves (22 July 184627 December 1931), was an Anglo-Irish poet, songwriter and folklorist.

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Alfred Wilks Drayson

Alfred Wilks Drayson (also Wilkes) (1827–1901) was an English army officer, author and astronomer.

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Ali Kemal

Ali Kemal Bey (1867 – 6 November 1922) was an Ottoman journalist, newspaper editor, poet and a politician of liberal signature, who was for some three months Minister of the Interior in the government of Damat Ferid Pasha, the Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire.

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Alice (Alice's Adventures in Wonderland)

Alice is a fictional character and protagonist of Lewis Carroll's children's novel Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and its sequel, Through the Looking-Glass (1871).

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Alice Loane

Alice Eliza Loane writing as M. Loane (23 October 1863 – 18 January 1922) was a British author.

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Alice Meynell

Alice Christiana Gertrude Meynell (née Thompson; 11 October 184727 November 1922) was an English writer, editor, critic, and suffragist, now remembered mainly as a poet.

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Alice Thomas Ellis

Alice Thomas Ellis (born Ann Margaret Lindholm, 9 September 1932 – 8 March 2005) was a British writer and essayist.

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Alice Thomson

Alice Thomson (born 24 April 1967) is a British political journalist.

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Alistair Hicks

Alistair Hicks (born 1 August 1956) is a writer and art curator.

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Alix Strachey

Alix Strachey (4 June 1892 – 28 April 1973), née Sargant-Florence, was an American-born British psychoanalyst and, with her husband, the translator into English of The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud.

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All in the Mind (novel)

All in the Mind is a 2008 novel by Alastair Campbell, the former Director of Communications and Strategy for the British Prime Minister Tony Blair.

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Allan Massie

Allan Johnstone Massie CBE (born 1938) is a Scottish journalist, columnist, sports writer and novelist.

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Allegra Stratton

Allegra Stratton (born 25 November 1980) is a British journalist and writer.

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Allie Esiri

Allie Esiri (born 27 January 1967), née Allie Byrne, is a British writer and former stage, film, and television actress.

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Allister Heath

Allister Heath (born 1978) is a British business journalist and commentator.

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Almanach de Gotha

The Almanach de Gotha (Gothaischer Hofkalender) was a directory of Europe's royalty and higher nobility, also including the major governmental, military and diplomatic corps, as well as statistical data by country.

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Alsager Hay Hill

Alsager Hay Hill (1 October 1839 – 2 August 1906) was an English social reformer active during the late 19th century, influential on poor law reform and employment issues.

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Ambrose Applejohn's Adventure

Ambrose Applejohn's Adventure is a 1921 play written by Walter Hackett.

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Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard (born 7 December 1957) is the international business editor of the Daily Telegraph.

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Ambrose Philips

Ambrose Philips (167418 June 1749) was an English poet and politician.

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America Alone

America Alone: The End of the World as We Know It is a 2006 non-fiction book by the Canadian newspaper columnist and writer Mark Steyn.

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American Catholic Church (1915)

The American Catholic Church, in its original form, is no longer in existence, although many groups have made claims to its lineage through the consecrations of Paolo Miraglia-Gulotti and Frederick Ebenezer Lloyd.

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Aminatta Forna

Aminatta Forna, OBE (born 1964) is a Scottish and Sierra Leonean writer.

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Amity Shlaes

Amity Ruth Shlaes (born September 10, 1960) is an American author and newspaper and magazine columnist.

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Amnesty International

Amnesty International (commonly known as Amnesty or AI) is a London-based non-governmental organization focused on human rights.

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Amongst the Medici

Amongst the Medici is a radio documentary series by historian Bettany Hughes.

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Amr Waked

Amr Waked (Egyptian Arabic: عمرو واكد; born April 12, 1973) is an Egyptian film, television, and stage actor.

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An Appeal to Reason

An Appeal to Reason: A Cool Look at Global Warming is a 2008 book by Nigel Lawson.

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An Inspector Calls

An Inspector Calls is a play written by English dramatist J. B. Priestley, first performed in 1945 in the Soviet Union and in 1946 in the UK.

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Anatol Goldberg

Anatoly "Anatol" Maksimovich Goldberg (Анатолий Максимович Гольдберг; 7 May 1910 in St Petersburg – 5 March 1982 in London) was a broadcaster and writer who became head of the BBC Russian Service during the Cold War.

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Anatoly Koryagin

Anatoly Ivanovich Koryagin (Анато́лий Ива́нович Коря́гин, born 15 September 1938, Kansk, Krasnoyarsk Krai) is a psychiatrist and Soviet dissident.

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Andrée Howard

Andrée Howard (3 October 1910 – 18 April 1968) was a British ballet dancer and choreographer.

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Andrei Navrozov

Andrei Navrozov, poet and writer, was born in Moscow in 1956, grandson of the playwright Andrei Navrozov (1899–1941) and son of the essayist and translator Lev Navrozov (born 1928).

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Andrew Brown (writer)

Andrew Brown (born 1955 in London) is a British journalist, writer, and editor.

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Andrew Cranston

Andrew Cranston (born 22 July 1969) is a Scottish painter.

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Andrew Gilligan

Andrew Paul Gilligan (born 22 November 1968) is a British journalist, currently senior correspondent of The Sunday Times and head of the Capital City Foundation at Policy Exchange.

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Andrew Haldenby

Andrew Haldenby is a co-founder of the think tank Reform (in 2001, with Nick Herbert), and has been its Director since May 2005.

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Andrew Hay, 8th Earl of Erroll

Andrew Hay, 8th Earl of Erroll (– 8 October 1585) was a Scottish nobleman and politician.

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Andrew Jefford

Andrew Jefford (born 1956) is an English journalist, radio presenter, poet, magazine editor, and as a wine writer, the author of various books and columns.

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Andrew Malcolm (author)

Andrew Malcolm, born 10 October 1948, is a British author and campaigner, who pursued a seven-year breach-of-contract claim against Oxford University Press, which he won with a landmark legal judgment in the Court of Appeal in 1990.

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Andrew Montford

Andrew William Montford is an English writer and editor who is the owner of the Bishop Hill blog.

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Andrew Neil

Andrew Ferguson Neil (born 21 May 1949) is a British journalist and broadcaster.

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Andrew Roberts (historian)

Andrew Roberts (born 13 January 1963) is a British historian and journalist.

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Andrew Robson

Andrew Michael Robson OBE (born 1964) is an English professional bridge player, writer and teacher.

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Andrew Scull

Andrew T. Scull (born 1947) is a British-born sociologist whose research is centered on the social history of medicine and particularly psychiatry.

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Andrew Taylor (author)

Andrew Taylor (born 14 October 1951) is a British author best known for his crime novels, which include the Lydmouth series, the Roth Trilogy and historical novels such as the best-selling The American Boy and The Ashes of London.

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Andrew Weldon

Andrew Weldon is a Melbourne-based cartoonist.

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Andrey Goncharenko

Andrey Goncharenko (Андрей Николаевич Гончаренко) is a Russian billionaire businessman, the CEO of a Gazprom subsidiary, and the owner of four central London houses bought for a total of £250 million, including Hanover Lodge, "the UK’s most expensive home", for £120 million.

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Aneurin Bevan

Aneurin Bevan (15 November 1897 – 6 July 1960), often known as Nye Bevan, was a Welsh Labour Party politician who was the Minister for Health in the post-war Attlee ministry from 1945-51.

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Angela Huth

Angela Huth (born 29 August 1938) is an English novelist and journalist.

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Anglo-French Financial Commission

The Anglo-French Financial Commission was a special delegation to the United States from the governments of the United Kingdom and France in 1915 during the First World War.

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Angus MacNeil

Angus Brendan MacNeil (Aonghas Brianan MacNèill) (born 21 July 1970) is the Scottish National Party (SNP) Member of Parliament (MP) for Na h-Eileanan an Iar.

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Anjelica Huston

Anjelica Huston (born July 8, 1951) is an American actress, director, and former fashion model.

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Anjem Choudary

Anjem Choudary (Urdu:; born 18 January 1967) is a British Islamist social and political activist convicted of inviting support for a proscribed organisation, namely the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, under the Terrorism Act 2000.

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Ann Veronica

Ann Veronica is a New Woman novel by H. G. Wells published in 1909.

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Anna Adams

Anna Adams (9 March 1926 – 2 October 2011) was an English poet and artist.

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Anna Karenina (1935 film)

Anna Karenina is a 1935 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film adaptation of the novel Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy and directed by Clarence Brown.

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Anna Netrebko

Anna Yuryevna Netrebko (Анна Юрьевна Нетребко, born 18 September 1971) is a Russian operatic soprano.

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Anne Applebaum

Anne Elizabeth Applebaum (born July 25, 1964) is an American-Polish journalist and Pulitzer Prize–winning author who has written extensively about communism and the development of civil society in Central and Eastern Europe.

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Anne Gallagher

Anne Therese Gallagher AO is the President of the International Catholic Migration Commission.

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Anne Manning (novelist)

Anne Manning (17 February 1807 – 14 September 1879) was a British novelist.

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Anne Marie Waters

Anne Marie Waters (born 24 August 1977) is a far-right politician in the United Kingdom.

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Anne McElvoy

Anne McElvoy (born 25 June 1965) is a British journalist for The Economist and the London Evening Standard, and a BBC broadcaster.

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Anne Sebba

Anne Sebba is an award-winning British biographer, writer, lecturer and journalist.

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Annie Louisa Walker

Anna Louisa Walker (23 June 1836 in Staffordshire – 7 July 1907 in Bath, Somerset) was an English and Canadian teacher and author.

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Another Sunday and Sweet F.A.

Another Sunday and Sweet F.A. is a television play (a one-off drama) written by Jack Rosenthal and directed by Michael Apted which was first broadcast on 8 January 1972 in Granada Television's Sunday Night Theatre strand.

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Anthony Browne (UK politics)

Anthony Browne (born 19 January 1967) was head of the British Bankers' Association from September 2012 to 2017.

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Anthony Bushell

Anthony Arnatt Bushell (19 May 1904 – 2 April 1997) was an English film actor and director, who appeared in 56 films between 1929 and 1961.

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Anthony Hartley

Anthony Hartley (1925–2000) was a writer and critic.

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Anthony Powell

Anthony Dymoke Powell (21 December 1905 – 28 March 2000) was an English novelist best known for his twelve-volume work A Dance to the Music of Time, published between 1951 and 1975.

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Anthony Sattin

Anthony Sattin is a British journalist and broadcaster and the author of several highly acclaimed books of history and travel.

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Anthony Warner (chef)

Anthony Warner (born 1973) is a British chef and food writer and the author of the Angry Chef blog.

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Anti-suffragism

Anti-suffragism was a political movement composed of both men and women that began in the late 19th century in order to campaign against women's suffrage in countries such as Australia, Canada, Ireland, the United Kingdom and the United States.

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Antoinette Sandbach

Antoinette Geraldine Mackeson-Sandbach (born 15 February 1969), known as Antoinette Sandbach, is a Conservative Party politician who was elected as the Member of Parliament for Eddisbury in Cheshire at the 2015 general election.

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Anton Emdin

Anton Emdin (born 2 April 1976) is a freelance illustrator and cartoonist from Sydney, Australia.

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Arabella Pollen

Arabella Pollen (born 22 June 1961) is an English fashion designer and, as Bella Pollen, journalist and author of five novels published between 1997 and 2011.

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Archer Thompson Gurney

Archer Thompson Gurney (1820–1887) was a Church of England clergyman and hymnodist.

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Archibald Clark Kerr, 1st Baron Inverchapel

Archibald Clark Kerr, 1st Baron Inverchapel (17 March 1882, Australia – 5 July 1951), known as Sir Archibald Clark Kerr between 1935 and 1946, was a British diplomat.

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Argument from love

The Argument from love is an argument for the existence of God.

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Ariadne (poem)

Ariadne (1932) is a short epic or long narrative poem of 3,300 lines, by the British poet F. L. Lucas.

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Ariane Sherine

Ariane Sherine (born 3 July 1980) is a British musical stand-up comedian, comedy writer and journalist.

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Arminius

Arminius (German: Hermann; 18/17 BC – AD 21) was a chieftain of the Germanic Cherusci tribe who famously led an allied coalition of Germanic tribes to a decisive victory against three Roman legions in the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest in 9 AD.

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Arnold Bennett

Enoch Arnold Bennett (27 May 1867 – 27 March 1931) was an English writer.

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Arthur Griffith

Arthur Joseph Griffith (Art Seosamh Ó Gríobhtha; 31 March 1871 – 12 August 1922) was an Irish politician and writer, who founded and later led the political party Sinn Féin.

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Arthur Irwin Dasent

Arthur Irwin Dasent (8 May 1859 – 21 November 1939) was a British civil servant, miscellaneous writer, and biographer of his uncle John Thadeus Delane.

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Arthur Marshall (broadcaster)

Arthur Marshall, MBE (10 May 1910 – 27 January 1989) was a British writer, raconteur and broadcaster, born in Barnes, London in the UK.

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Arthur Rowan

Arthur Blennerhassett Rowan, (1800–1861) was a Church of Ireland cleric, Archdeacon of Ardfert from 1856 to 1861, known also as an antiquarian writer.

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Arthur Stratton

Arthur Mills Perce Stratton (1911 – 3 September 1975) was an American author and traveller.

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Arundel Street

Arundel Street is a street in the City of Westminster, London, that runs from Strand in the north to Temple Place in the south.

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Ash-shab yurid isqat an-nizam

(الشعب يريد إسقاط النظام, "the people want to bring down the regime") is a political slogan associated with the Arab Spring.

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Ashes to Ashes (TV series)

Ashes to Ashes is a British crime drama and police procedural drama television series, serving as the sequel to Life on Mars.

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Association of Chief Police Officers

The Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO), officially The Association of Chief Police Officers of England, Wales and Northern Ireland, was a not-for-profit private limited company that for many years led the development of policing practices in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland.

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Auberon Waugh

Auberon Alexander Waugh (17 November 1939 – 16 January 2001) was an English journalist, and eldest son of Evelyn Waugh.

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Augmented seventh chord

The augmented seventh chord, or seventh augmented fifth chord, or seventh sharp five chord is a dominant seventh chord consisting of an augmented triad with a minor seventh.

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Augustan drama

Augustan drama can refer to the dramas of Ancient Rome during the reign of Caesar Augustus, but it most commonly refers to the plays of Great Britain in the early 18th century, a subset of 18th-century Augustan literature.

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Augustan prose

Augustan prose is somewhat ill-defined, as the definition of "Augustan" relies primarily upon changes in taste in poetry.

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Augustus Prinsep

Augustus Prinsep (31 March 1803–10 October 1830) was an English artist, writer, and civil servant.

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Auschwitz Report (book)

Auschwitz Report (2006) is a non-fiction report on the Auschwitz extermination camp by Primo Levi and Leonardo de Benedetti.

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Australian Labor Party split of 1955

The Australian Labor Party split of 1955 was a split within the Australian Labor Party along ethnocultural lines and about the position towards communism.

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Avi Shlaim

Avraham "Avi" Shlaim FBA (born 31 October 1945) is an Israeli historian, Emeritus Professor of International Relations at the University of Oxford and fellow of the British Academy.

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Ayad Allawi

Ayad Allawi (إياد علاوي.; born May 31, 1944) is an Iraqi politician.

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Émile Bénard

Henri Jean Émile Bénard (June 23, 1844 – October 15, 1929) was a French architect and painter.

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Ba'ath Party

The Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party (حزب البعث العربي الاشتراكي) was a political party founded in Syria by Michel Aflaq, Salah al-Din al-Bitar, and associates of Zaki al-Arsuzi.

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Bahar Mustafa race row

In 2015 a racial controversy developed in the United Kingdom surrounding the activities of Bahar Mustafa, a representative for Goldsmiths Students' Union.

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Balfour Declaration

The Balfour Declaration was a public statement issued by the British government during World War I announcing support for the establishment of a "national home for the Jewish people" in Palestine, then an Ottoman region with a minority Jewish population (around 3–5% of the total).

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Balham, Gateway to the South

"Balham, Gateway to the South" is a comedy sketch parodying a short travel documentary about the South London suburb of Balham.

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Barbara Amiel

Barbara Joan Estelle Amiel, Baroness Black of Crossharbour (born 4 December 1940) is a British conservative journalist, writer, and socialite.

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Barbara Euphan Todd

Barbara Euphan Todd (9 January 1890 – 2 February 1976) was an English writer well remembered for her ten books for children about a scarecrow called Worzel Gummidge.

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Barbara Noble

Barbara Noble (1907–2001) was an English publisher and novelist.

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Barbara of the House of Grebe

"Barbara of the House of Grebe" is the second of ten short stories in Thomas Hardy's frame narrative A Group of Noble Dames.

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Barbara Toy

Barbara Alex Toy FRGS (11 August 1908 – 18 July 2001) was an Australian-British travel writer, theatrical director, playwright, and screenplay writer.

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Barbary Coast (film)

Barbary Coast is a 1935 American historical drama film directed by Howard Hawks.

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Bare-faced Messiah

Bare-faced Messiah: The True Story of L. Ron Hubbard is a posthumous biography of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard by British journalist Russell Miller.

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Basil Wright

Basil Wright (12 June 1907, Sutton, Surrey – 14 October 1987, Frieth, Buckinghamshire, England) was a documentary filmmaker, film historian, film critic and teacher.

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Basket of deplorables

"Basket of deplorables" is a phrase from a 2016 presidential election campaign speech delivered by Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton on September 9, 2016, at a campaign fundraising event, which Clinton used to describe half of the supporters of her general election opponent, Republican nominee Donald Trump.

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Battersea Bridge

Battersea Bridge is a five-span arch bridge with cast-iron girders and granite piers crossing the River Thames in London, England.

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Battle of the Teutoburg Forest

The Battle of the Teutoburg Forest (Schlacht im Teutoburger Wald, Hermannsschlacht, or Varusschlacht, Disfatta di Varo), described as the Varian Disaster (Clades Variana) by Roman historians, took place in the Teutoburg Forest in 9 CE, when an alliance of Germanic tribes ambushed and decisively destroyed three Roman legions and their auxiliaries, led by Publius Quinctilius Varus.

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Béla Király

Dr.

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Böhmermann affair

The Böhmermann affair (also known as Erdogate) was a political affair following an experimental poem on German satirist Jan Böhmermann's satire show Neo Magazin Royale in late March 2016 that deliberately insulted Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan using profane language.

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Beauchamp King

Beauchamp King (17 May 1993 – after 2007) was a British Thoroughbred racehorse and sire.

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Becky Sharp

Becky Sharp is a 1935 American historical drama film directed by Rouben Mamoulian and starring Miriam Hopkins.

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Bedford (UK Parliament constituency)

Bedford is a constituency represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since the 2017 general election by Mohammad Yasin of the Labour Party.

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Beeban Kidron

Beeban Tania Kidron, Baroness Kidron, OBE (born 2 May 1961) is an English film director, producer, children's rights campaigner and member of the UK House of Lords.

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Behavioral economics

Behavioral economics studies the effects of psychological, cognitive, emotional, cultural and social factors on the economic decisions of individuals and institutions and how those decisions vary from those implied by classical theory.

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Being Tom Cruise

"The Church of Scientology Presents: Being Tom Cruise, Why Scientology Isn't In Any Way Mental" is a satirical spoof documentary from the series Star Stories, parodying the life of Tom Cruise and his relationship with the Church of Scientology.

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Bell Pottinger

Bell Pottinger Private (legally BPP Communications Ltd.; informally Bell Pottinger) was a British multinational public relations, reputation management and marketing company headquartered in London, United Kingdom.

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Ben Kingsley

Sir Ben Kingsley (born Krishna Pandit Bhanji; 31 December 1943) is an English actor with a career spanning over 50 years.

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Ben Stiller

Benjamin Edward Meara Stiller (born November 30, 1965) is an American actor, comedian, writer, producer, and director.

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Ben Wallace (politician)

Robert Ben Lobban Wallace PC (born 15 May 1970) is a British Conservative Party politician.

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Ben Whishaw

Benjamin John Whishaw (born 14 October 1980) is an English actor.

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Benefits Street

Benefits Street is a British documentary series broadcast on Channel 4.

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Benjamin Britten

Edward Benjamin Britten, Baron Britten of Aldeburgh (22 November 1913 – 4 December 1976) was an English composer, conductor and pianist.

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Benjamin Ivry

Benjamin Ivry is an American writer on the arts, broadcaster and translator.

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Benjamin Moran

Benjamin Moran (b. Franklin County, Pennsylvania, 1820 – d. Braintree, Essex, on 20 June 1886) worked at the United States Legation (later the US Embassy) in London from 1853 to 1874.

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Beresford Potter

Beresford Potter FRGS (1853–10 May 1931) was Archdeacon in Cyprus and Syria from 1901 to 1928.

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Bernard Cookson

Bernard Cookson (1937 – 26 January 2016) was a British cartoonist and illustrator.

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Bernard Gray

Sir Bernard Peter Gray (born 6 September 1960 in Redhill, Surrey) is a British businessman, journalist, and former government worker.

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Bernard Lee on stage and screen

Bernard Lee (1908–1981) was an English actor who performed in many light entertainment media, including film, television and theatre.

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Bernard Levin

Henry Bernard Levin CBE (19 August 1928 – 7 August 2004) was an English journalist, author and broadcaster, described by The Times as "the most famous journalist of his day".

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Bert Wiegman

Albert Edward Bernard Wiegman (born March 1952) is a British private equity manager, founder and partner of Langholm Capital.

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Beth Chatto

Beth Chatto (27 June 1923 – 13 May 2018) was a British plantswoman, garden designer and author best known for creating the Beth Chatto Gardens near Elmstead Market in the English county of Essex.

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Beth Chatto Gardens

The Beth Chatto Gardens are an informal collection of ecological gardens created by plantswoman Beth Chatto in 1960 from the gravel soil and bogs of the disused fruit farm belonging to her husband Andrew Chatto.

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Betty Kenward

Betty Kenward, MBE (born Elizabeth Kemp-Welch; 1906–2001) was an English magazine columnist, known for writing "Jennifer's Diary", originally in Tatler, subsequently in Queen.

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Beverley (UK Parliament constituency)

Beverley has been the name of a parliamentary constituency in the East Riding of Yorkshire for three periods.

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Bevis Hillier

Bevis Hillier (born 28 March 1940) is an English art historian, author and journalist.

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Bhabani Bhattacharya

Bhabani Bhattacharya (10 November 1906–10 October 1988) was an Indian writer, of Bengali origin, who wrote social-realist fiction.

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Big Society

The Big Society was a political ideology developed in the early 21st century.

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Bilal Philips

Abu Ameenah Bilal Philips, (born Dennis Bradley Philips, 1946) is a Jamaican-born Canadian Muslim teacher, speaker, and author who lives in Qatar.

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Bill Hillmann

Bill Hillmann (born 1982) is an American author, storyteller, and journalist.

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Bill the Bloodhound

Bill the Bloodhound is a short story by British comic writer P. G. Wodehouse (1881–1975).

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Birds in culture

Birds have been a part of human culture, in the broad sense of social behaviour, customs and practices including but not limited to expressive forms such as art, music and religion, for thousands of years.

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Birdsong (novel)

Birdsong is a 1993 war novel and family saga by the English author Sebastian Faulks.

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Bitter Lake (film)

Bitter Lake is a 2015 BBC documentary by British filmmaker Adam Curtis.

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Black jails

Black jails are a network of extralegal detention centers established by Chinese security forces and private security companies across the People's Republic of China in recent years.

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Black Sheep (Hill novel)

Black Sheep, is a novella Retrieved 2016-07-03.

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Blackburn (UK Parliament constituency)

Blackburn is a constituency represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2015 by Kate Hollern of the Labour Party.

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Blaming the Victims

Blaming the Victims: Spurious Scholarship and the Palestinian Question, is a collection of essays, co-edited by Palestinian scholar and advocate Edward Said and journalist and author Christopher Hitchens, published by Verso Books in 1988.

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Bloomsbury and the Poets

Bloomsbury and the Poets is a 2014 book by Nicholas Murray.

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Blowing Up Russia

Blowing Up Russia: Terror from Within (ФСБ взрывает Россию, FSB blows Russia up) is a book written by Alexander Litvinenko and Yuri Felshtinsky.

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Bob Seely

Robert William Henry Seely MBE (born 1966) is a British politician who has served as the Member of Parliament (MP) for the Isle of Wight since June 2017.

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Bongo Bongo Land

In British English, Bongo Bongo Land (or Bongo-bongo Land) is a pejorative term used to refer to Third World countries, particularly in Africa, or to a fictional such country.

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Bonjour Tristesse

Bonjour Tristesse ("Hello Sadness") is a novel by Françoise Sagan.

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Boris Johnson

Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson (born 19 June 1964), best known as Boris Johnson, is a British politician, popular historian and journalist serving as Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs since 2016 and the Member of Parliament (MP) for Uxbridge and South Ruislip since 2015.

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Boris Volodarsky

Boris B. Volodarsky (Борис Борисович Володарский; born 14 August 1955 in Syzran, Kuybyshev Oblast) is an English historian, specialising in Intelligence History, which he has studied for almost 30 years after having moved to the West, and the history of the Spanish Civil War.

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Bouncing Off the Satellites

Bouncing off the Satellites is the fourth studio album by American new wave band the B-52's, released on September 8, 1986.

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Bourne Park House

Bourne Park House is a Queen Anne style country house on Bourne Park Road, between Bishopsbourne and Bridge near Canterbury in Kent.

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Boys Will Be Boys (film)

Boys Will Be Boys is a 1935 British comedy film directed by William Beaudine which stars Will Hay, Gordon Harker and Jimmy Hanley.

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Brandy filmography

As an actress, Brandy has appeared in feature films and television shows.

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Brandy Norwood

Brandy Rayana Norwood (born February 11, 1979), known professionally by her mononym Brandy, is an American singer, songwriter, record producer, and actress.

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Bread Street Kitchen

Bread Street Kitchen is a restaurant owned by chef Gordon Ramsay within the One New Change retail and office development in London.

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Break of Hearts

Break of Hearts is a 1935 RKO film starring Katharine Hepburn and Charles Boyer.

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Breitbart News

Breitbart News Network (known commonly as Breitbart News, Breitbart or Breitbart.com) is a far-right*.

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Brenda Pye

Brenda Pye (29 November 1907 – 26 April 2005), also known by her earlier married name of Brenda Landon or her maiden name of Brenda Capron, was an English portrait painter and landscape artist.

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Brendan O'Neill (journalist)

Brendan O'Neill is the editor of Spiked Online and a columnist for The Australian and The Big Issue.

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Brian Burland

Brian Burland (23 April 1931 – 11 February 2010) was a Bermudian writer, who was the author of nine acclaimed novels, Bermuda Sun, 17 February 2010.

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Brian Hutton, Baron Hutton

James Brian Edward Hutton, Baron Hutton, PC, QC (born 29 June 1931) is a former Lord Chief Justice of Northern Ireland and British Lord of Appeal in Ordinary.

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Brian Inglis

Brian Inglis (31 July 1916 – 11 February 1993) was an Irish journalist, historian and television presenter.

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Brian Moore (novelist)

Brian Moore (25 August 1921 – 11 January 1999), who has been described as "one of the few genuine masters of the contemporary novel", was a novelist and screenwriter from Northern Ireland who emigrated to Canada and later lived in the United States.

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Brian Rix

Brian Norman Roger Rix, Baron Rix, (27 January 1924 – 20 August 2016) was a British actor and activist.

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Brief Lives

Brief Lives is a collection of short biographies written by John Aubrey (1626–1697) in the last decades of the 17th century.

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Britain's Great War

Britain's Great War is a British documentary television series that broadcast on BBC One 27 January 2014.

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Britannia Coco-nut Dancers

The Britannia Coco-nut Dancers or Nutters are a troupe of Lancastrian clog dancers who perform every Easter in Bacup, dancing across the town.

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British expedition to Tibet

The British expedition to Tibet, also known as the British invasion of Tibet or the Younghusband expedition to Tibet began in December 1903 and lasted until September 1904.

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British Nigerian

British Nigerian is a term sometimes used to describe British people of Nigerian descent, or Nigerian people of British descent.

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British propaganda during World War II

Britain re-created the World War I Ministry of Information for the duration of World War II to generate propaganda to influence the population towards support for the war effort.

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Broadcast (band)

Broadcast are an English indie electronic band, founded in Birmingham, England in 1995 by Trish Keenan (vocals, keyboards, guitar) and James Cargill (bass).

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Brookeborough

Brookeborough is a village in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland, at the westerly foot of Slieve Beagh.

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Brother Sun, Sister Moon

Brother Sun, Sister Moon (Fratello Sole, Sorella Luna) is a 1972 film directed by Franco Zeffirelli and starring Graham Faulkner and Judi Bowker.

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Bruce Anderson (columnist)

Bruce Anderson is a British political columnist, currently working as a freelancer.

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Bryan Appleyard

Bryan Appleyard (born 24 August 1951, Manchester) is a British journalist and author.

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Bryan Forbes

Bryan Forbes CBE (born John Theobald Clarke; 22 July 1926 – 8 May 2013) was an English film director, screenwriter, film producer, actor and novelist, described as a "Renaissance man"Falk Q..

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Burton upon Trent

Burton upon Trent, also known as Burton-on-Trent or simply Burton, is a town on the River Trent in East Staffordshire, England, close to the border with Derbyshire.

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C. Fox Smith

Cicely Fox Smith (1 February 1882 – 8 April 1954) was an English poet and writer.

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Cage (organization)

Cage, formerly Cageprisoners Ltd, sometimes styled as "CAGE", is a London-based advocacy organisation which aims "to empower communities impacted by the War on Terror".

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Cal McCrystal

Cal McCrystal is a British theatre director and actor.

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Calabash International Literary Festival

The Calabash International Literary Festival is a three-day festival in Jamaica staged on a biennial basis on even years (having been held annually in its first decade).

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Cambridgeshire and Peterborough mayoral election, 2017

The inaugural Cambridgeshire and Peterborough mayoral election was held on 4 May 2017 to elect the Mayor of Cambridgeshire and Peterborough.

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Camden Town Group

The Camden Town Group was a group of English Post-Impressionist artists active 1911–1913.

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Camila Batmanghelidjh

Camila Batmanghelidjh, CBE (کامیلا باتمانقلیچ Kamylā Batmanghelych; born 1963) is an Iranian-born author and former charity executive in the United Kingdom.

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Canada Pavilion, British Empire Exhibition

The Canada Pavilion was the Dominion of Canada's display area at the 1924-25 British Empire Exhibition at Wembley Park, north-west London.

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Candide

Candide, ou l'Optimisme, is a French satire first published in 1759 by Voltaire, a philosopher of the Age of Enlightenment.

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Canterbury (UK Parliament constituency)

Canterbury is a constituency represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2017 by Rosie Duffield of the Labour Party.

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Cantor Fitzgerald

Cantor Fitzgerald is a financial services firm that was founded in 1945.

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Captain Beaky and His Band

Captain Beaky & His Band (Not Forgetting Hissing Sid!!!), commonly shortened to Captain Beaky & His Band or Captain Beaky, is the title of two albums (volumes 1 and 2) of poetry by Jeremy Lloyd set to music by Jim Parker and recited by various British celebrities.

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CapX

CapX is a British online news website and aggregator founded by the Centre for Policy Studies, and features columnists and contributors such as Tim Montgomerie, Daniel Hannan and V. S. Naipaul.

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Carmarthen Public Rooms

The Carmarthen Public Rooms were built in 1854, with the intention to create public rooms were first expressed by Dr David Lloyd in 1839.

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Carol Reed

Sir Carol Reed (30 December 1906 – 25 April 1976) was an English film director best known for Odd Man Out (1947), The Fallen Idol (1948) and The Third Man (1949).

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Caroline Lucas

Caroline Patricia Lucas (born 9 December 1960) is a British politician, and since 2 September 2016, Co-Leader of the Green Party of England and Wales, with Jonathan Bartley.

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Caroline Molesworth

Caroline Molesworth (4 November 1794 - 29 December 1872) was a British botanist and meteorologist.

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Caroline Moorehead

Caroline Mary Moorehead (born 28 October 1944) is a human rights journalist and biographer.

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Carroll Carstairs

Carroll Chevalier Carstairs MC (20 March 1888 – 2 October 1948) was an American art dealer who served in the Grenadier Guards of the British Army during World War I. He was a son of Charles Stewart Carstairs (2 August 1865 – 9 July 1928), a noted American art dealer who was chairman of the board of M. Knoedler, and his wife, the former Esther Holmes Hazeltine (29 April 1864 – 15 January 1907).

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Carsten Peter Thiede

Carsten Peter Thiede OCF KStJ (8 August 1952 – 14 December 2004) was a German archaeologist and New Testament scholar.

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Caryl Churchill

Caryl Churchill (born 3 September 1938, London) is a British playwright known for dramatising the abuses of power, for her use of non-naturalistic techniques, and for her exploration of sexual politics and feminist themes.

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Cases of political abuse of psychiatry in the Soviet Union

In the Soviet Union, a systematic political abuse of psychiatry took place and was based on the interpretation of political dissent as a psychiatric problem.

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Cass Sunstein

Cass Robert Sunstein FBA (born September 21, 1954) is an American legal scholar, particularly in the fields of constitutional law, administrative law, environmental law, and law and behavioral economics, who was the Administrator of the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs in the Obama administration from 2009 to 2012.

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Castle Bromwich Assembly

Castle Bromwich Assembly is a factory owned by Jaguar Land Rover.

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Catch a Fire

Catch a Fire is a 1973 album by Bob Marley and the Wailers.

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Cate McGregor

Group Captain Catherine "Cate" McGregor is a transgender woman, who served as a member of the Australian Defence Force (ADF).

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Catholic literary revival

The Catholic literary revival is a term that has been applied to a movement towards explicitly Catholic allegiance and themes among leading literary figures in France and England, roughly in the century from 1860 to 1960.

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Catsuits and bodysuits in popular media

Catsuits are a recurring costume for fictional characters in various media, as well as for entertainers, especially for use in musical performances.

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Causes of the 1948 Palestinian exodus

The causes and explanations of the exodus of Palestinian Arabs that arose during the 1947–1948 Civil War in Mandatory Palestine and the 1948 Arab–Israeli War are a matter of great controversy between historians, journalists and commentators of the Arab–Israeli conflict.

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Cécile (novel)

Cécile is an historical novel by the British writer F. L. Lucas.

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Central University (Colombia)

The Central University (Universidad Central) is a private institution of higher education, whose two offices are at Bogotá Colombia. It offers undergraduate and graduate programs in the areas of humanities, arts, economic and administrative sciences and engineering.

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Centre for Social Cohesion

The Centre for Social Cohesion (CSC) was a British think tank with its headquarters in London.

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Cereal Killer Cafe

Cereal Killer Cafe is a café situated in Shoreditch, London that serves branded breakfast cereals.

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Charles Arnold-Baker

Charles Arnold-Baker, OBE (born Wolfgang Charles Werner von Blumenthal; 25 June 1918 — 6 June 2009) was an English member of MI6, barrister (called 1948) and historian.

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Charles Bowen, Baron Bowen

Charles Synge Christopher Bowen, Baron Bowen, (1 January 1835 – 10 April 1894) was an English judge.

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Charles Clore

Sir Charles Clore (24 December 1904 – 26 July 1979) was a British financier, retail and property magnate and philanthropist.

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Charles Dickens

Charles John Huffam Dickens (7 February 1812 – 9 June 1870) was an English writer and social critic.

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Charles Glass

Charles Glass (born January 23, 1951) is an American-British author, journalist, broadcaster and publisher specializing in the Middle East and the Second World War.

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Charles Henry Pearson

Charles Henry Pearson (7 September 1830 – 29 May 1894) was a British-born Australian historian, educationist, politician and journalist.

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Charles John Cornish

Charles John Cornish (28 September 1858 – 30 January 1906) was an English naturalist and author.

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Charles Moore (journalist)

Charles Hilary Moore (born 31 October 1956) is an English journalist and a former editor of The Daily Telegraph, The Sunday Telegraph and The Spectator.

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Charles Thomas Whitmell

Charles Thomas Whitmell (10 July 1849 – 10 December 1919) was an English astronomer, mathematician and educationalist.

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Charles Vince

Charles Vince (born 1887) was an English journalist, who served as a soldier in World War I.

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Charles Walker (British politician)

Charles Ashley Rupert Walker, (born 11 September 1967) is a British Conservative Party politician, who has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for Broxbourne since the 2005 general election.

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Charles William Heckethorn

Charles William Heckethorn (c. 1826 - 13 January 1902) was a Swiss-born, naturalized British, author best known for his history of secret societies which was produced in two editions and translated into German, and his works relating to the history of London.

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Charlie Johnson in the Flames

Charlie Johnson in the Flames is the second novel by Canadian academic Michael Ignatieff.

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Charlie Phillips (photographer)

Ronald "Charlie" Phillips (born 22 November 1944), also known by the nickname "Smokey", is a Jamaican-born restaurateur, photographer, and documenter of black London.

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Charlotte Metcalf

Charlotte Metcalf (born 1958) is a British documentary film director and producer.

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Charterhouse School

Charterhouse is an independent day and boarding school in Godalming, Surrey.

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Chef's Table at Brooklyn Fare

Chef's Table at Brooklyn Fare is a restaurant originally located at 200 Schermerhorn Street (at Hoyt Street) in Downtown Brooklyn, New York City with three Michelin stars.

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Children in Need

BBC Children in Need (also promoted as Plant Mewn Angen in Wales) is the BBC's UK charity.

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Chinley

Chinley is a rural village in the High Peak Borough of Derbyshire, England, with a population of 2,796 at the 2011 Census.

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Choisir

Choisir is an Australian-bred dual hemisphere-winning Thoroughbred racehorse.

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Chris Finlayson

Christopher Francis Finlayson (born 1956) is a New Zealand lawyer, politician and Member of Parliament, representing the National Party.

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Chris Gollon

Chris Gollon (1953 – 25 April 2017) was a British painter.

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Chris Patten

Christopher Francis Patten, Baron Patten of Barnes, (born 12 May 1944) is a British politician who served as the 28th and final Governor of Hong Kong from 1992-1997.

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Chris Steele-Perkins

Christopher Horace Steele-Perkins (born 28 July 1947) is a British photographer and member of Magnum Photos, best known for his depiction of Africa, Afghanistan, England, and Japan.

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Christian Kerr

Christian Kerr, an Australian conservative political staffer turned political commentator, a co-founder of the online news service Crikey and journalist and columnist for The Australian.

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Christian Mary McEwen

Christian Mary McEwen, Dowager Lady Hesketh, OBE, DL (17 July 1929, Marchmont House, Greenlaw, Berwickshire, Scotland – 7 April 2006, London), The Independent, 12 April 2006; accessed 18 March 2012.

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Christina Patterson

Christina Mary Patterson (born 1963) is a British journalist.

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Christopher Booker

Christopher John Penrice Booker (born 7 October 1937) is an English journalist and author.

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Christopher Gibbs

Christopher Henry Gibbs (born 29 July 1938) is a British antiques dealer and collector who was also an influential figure in men's fashion and interior design in 1960s London.

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Christopher MacLehose

Christopher Colin MacLehose CBE (born 1940)Nicholas Wroe,, The Guardian, 28 December 2012.

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Christopher Ondaatje

Sir Philip Christopher Ondaatje, OC, CBE, Hon.

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Christopher Sykes (author)

Christopher Hugh Sykes FRSL (17 November 1907 – 8 December 1986) was an English author.

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Christopher Ward (journalist)

Christopher Ward is a British author, journalist, editor, and publisher.

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Church of St Mary the Virgin, Ashwell

The Church of St Mary the Virgin in Ashwell in Hertfordshire is the Anglican parish church for the village.

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Cigar

A cigar is a rolled bundle of dried and fermented tobacco leaves made to be smoked.

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Cincinnati riots of 1884

The Cincinnati riots of 1884, also known as the Cincinnati Courthouse riots, were caused by public outrage over the decision of a jury to return a verdict of manslaughter in what was seen as a clear case of murder.

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Cisgender

Cisgender (often abbreviated to simply cis) is a term for people whose gender identity matches the sex that they were assigned at birth.

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Civic conservatism

Civic conservatism is a form of modern conservatism developed by the Conservative intellectual David Willetts.

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Claire Lehmann

Claire Lehmann is an Australian psychologist, writer, and the founding editor of Quillette.

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Clare Mulley

Clare Mulley (born 1969) is an award-winning biographer.

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Claud Morris

Claud Morris (20 January 1920 – 21 May 2000) was a British newspaper owner who sought to make peace between Arabs and Israelis.

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Clean eating

Clean eating is the belief that eating whole foods in their most natural state and avoiding processed foods such as refined sugar offers certain health benefits.

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Clemency Burton-Hill

Clemency Burton-Hill (born Clemency Margaret Greatrex Burton-Hill, born 1 July 1981) is an English broadcaster, author, novelist, journalist and violinist.

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Clerihew

A clerihew is a whimsical, four-line biographical poem invented by Edmund Clerihew Bentley.

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Clive Barnes

Clive Alexander Barnes CBE (13 May 1927 – 19 November 2008) was an English writer and critic.

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Closenberg Hotel

Closenberg Hotel is a three star heritage hotel located in Galle, Sri Lanka.

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Codename Villanelle

Codename Villanelle is a 2018 fictional thriller novel by British author Luke Jennings.

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Colchester High School

Colchester High School is a coeducational independent school located in Colchester in Essex, England.

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Cold Feet (series 5)

The fifth series of the British comedy drama television series Cold Feet was broadcast on the ITV network from 23 February to 16 March 2003.

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Colin Wilson

Colin Henry Wilson (26 June 1931 – 5 December 2013) was an English writer, philosopher and novelist.

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Colindale tube station

Colindale is a London Underground station in Colindale, a suburb of north London.

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Come Out of the Pantry

Come Out of the Pantry is a 1935 British musical film directed by Jack Raymond and starring Jack Buchanan, Fay Wray, James Carew and Fred Emney.

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Comic Relief

Comic Relief is an operating British charity, and an independent sister organization of the United States-based Comic Relief Inc. It was founded in 1985 by the comedy scriptwriter Richard Curtis and comedian Lenny Henry in response to famine in Ethiopia.

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Committee for a Free Britain

The Committee for a Free Britain (also known as the Campaign for a Free Britain) was a right-wing political pressure-group in the United Kingdom.

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Company K

Company K is a 1933 novel by William March, first serialised in parts in the New York magazine The Forum from 1930 to 1932, and published in its entirety by Smith and Haas on 19 January 1933, in New York.

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Comprised of

Comprised of is an expression in English: X "is comprised of" Y means that X is composed or made up of Y. While its use is common in writing and speech, it has been disparaged by some language professionals and style guides as an inappropriate substitution for comprises.

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Con Coughlin

Con Coughlin (born 14 January 1955) is a British journalist and author, currently The Daily Telegraph Defence Editor.

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Conchita Cintrón

Concepción Cintrón Verrill, also known as Conchita Cintrón or La Diosa de Oro ('The Golden Goddess') (August 9, 1922 in Antofagasta – February 17, 2009 in Lisbon), was a Chile-born Peruvian torera (female bullfighter), perhaps the most famous in the history of bullfighting.

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Conservapedia

Conservapedia is an English-language wiki encyclopedia project written from an American conservative point of view.

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Conservative Party (UK) leadership election, 1975

The 1975 Conservative Party leadership election was held in February 1975, in which the party's sitting MPs voted Margaret Thatcher as party leader on the second ballot.

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Constance Howell

Constance Howell was a novelist and socialist.

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Controversies surrounding Silvio Berlusconi

Silvio Berlusconi is an Italian media mogul and former Prime Minister of Italy who owns the largest broadcasting company in that country, Mediaset.

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Convoy PQ 17

PQ 17 was the code name for an Allied convoy in the Arctic Ocean during the Second World War.

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Corn Laws

The Corn Laws were tariffs and other trade restrictions on imported food and grain ("corn") enforced in Great Britain between 1815 and 1846.

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Cornelius Denvir

The Most Reverend Cornelius Denvir DD (1791–1865) was an Irish Roman Catholic Prelate, mathematician, natural philosopher and former Lord Bishop of Down and Connor.

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Coronation of Queen Victoria

The coronation of Queen Victoria took place on 28 June 1838, just over a year after she succeeded to the throne of the United Kingdom at the age of 18.

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Cosmo Landesman

Cosmo Landesman is a British-based American-born journalist and editor.

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Court of Session

The Court of Session (Cùirt an t-Seisein; Coort o Session) is the supreme civil court of Scotland, and constitutes part of the College of Justice; the supreme criminal court of Scotland is the High Court of Justiciary.

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Craig Brown (satirist)

Craig Edward Moncrieff Brown (born 23 May 1957) is an English critic and satirist, best known for his parodies in Private Eye.

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Craig Murray

Craig John Murray (born 17 October 1958) is a British former diplomat turned political activist, human rights campaigner, blogger and whistleblower.

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Criterion Restaurant

The Criterion Restaurant is an opulent restaurant complex facing Piccadilly Circus in the heart of London.

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Criticism of communist party rule

The actions by governments of communist states have been subject to criticism.

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Criticism of Human Rights Watch

The international non-governmental organization Human Rights Watch (HRW) has been the subject of criticism from a number of observers.

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Criticism of the BBC

The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) took its present form on 1 January 1927 when Sir John Reith became its first Director General.

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Criticism of the National Health Service (England)

Criticism of the National Health Service (England) includes issues such as access, waiting lists, healthcare coverage, and various scandals.

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Crown Colony of Malta

The Crown Colony of the Island of Malta and its Dependencies (commonly known as the Crown Colony of Malta) was a British colony in the present-day Republic of Malta.

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Cryptic crossword

A cryptic crossword is a crossword puzzle in which each clue is a word puzzle in and of itself.

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CTB v News Group Newspapers Ltd

CTB v News Group Newspapers is an English legal case between Manchester United player Ryan Giggs, given the pseudonym CTB, and defendants News Group Newspapers Limited and model Imogen Thomas.

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Cultural relationship between the Welsh and the English

The relationship between the Welsh and English is characterised largely by tolerance of people and cultures.

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Current affairs (news format)

Current affairs is a genre of broadcast journalism where the emphasis is on detailed analysis and discussion of news stories that have recently occurred or are ongoing at the time of broadcast.

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Curse of Scotland

The Curse of Scotland is a nickname used for the Nine of Diamonds playing card.

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Cyberbully (2015 film)

Cyberbully is a UK television docu-drama thriller that premiered on Channel 4 on 15 January 2015.

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Cyril Ray

Cyril Ray (16 March 1908 – 24 September 1991) was an English author and journalist.

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D. J. Taylor

David John Taylor (born 1960) is a British critic, novelist and biographer.

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Dai Bradley

David "Dai" Bradley (born 27 September 1953) is an English actor who became well known for his first time role of Billy Casper in the critically acclaimed 1969 film Kes, directed by Ken Loach.

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Daily Mail

The Daily Mail is a British daily middle-marketPeter Wilby, New Statesman, 19 December 2013 (online version: 2 January 2014) tabloid newspaper owned by the Daily Mail and General Trust and published in London.

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Daily Politics

Daily Politics is a British television programme launched by the BBC in 2003 and presented by Andrew Neil and Jo Coburn.

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Dame Edna Everage

Dame Edna Everage is a character created and performed by Australian comedian Barry Humphries, known for her lilac-coloured or "wisteria hue" hair and cat eye glasses or "face furniture", her favourite flower, the gladiolus ("gladdies") and her boisterous greeting: "Hello, Possums!" As Dame Edna, Humphries has written several books including an autobiography, My Gorgeous Life, appeared in several films and hosted several television shows (on which Humphries has also appeared as himself and other alter-egos).

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Damian Thompson

Damian Thompson (born 1962) is an English journalist, editor and author.

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Damien McCrystal

Damien McCrystal (born 23 March 1961) became the first City editor of The Sun, News International’s British daily tabloid, in September 1987 after Robert Worcester, founder of Market & Opinion Research International (MORI, now Ipsos MORI) told Rupert Murdoch, head of News International, that the wave of utility company privatisations in the UK had turned one quarter of The Sun’s readers into share-owners.

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Dan Hodges

Daniel Pearce Jackson Hodges (born 7 March 1969) is a British newspaper columnist.

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Dan Rabkin

Dan Rabkin is a Middle Eastern Affairs and National Security Analyst, as well as business owner.

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Daniel Hannan

Daniel John Hannan (born 1 September 1971) is a British writer, journalist and politician.

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Daniel Korski

Daniel Korski CBE (born April 1977) is a former special adviser to Prime Minister David Cameron and is the co-founder and CEO of PUBLIC, a venture capitalist firm focused on helping technology startups transform public services.

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Dariel

Dariel: a romance of Surrey is a novel by R. D. Blackmore published in 1897.

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Darius Guppy

Darius Guppy (born June 1964) is a Anglo-Persian businessman, known for his part in a 1993 insurance fraud involving a faked robbery.

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Darlan (horse)

Darlan (11 March 2007 – 4 February 2013) was a British Thoroughbred racehorse who competed in National Hunt racing.

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Dates (TV series)

Dates is a British television romantic drama series created by Bryan Elsley, who also created Skins, which first aired on Channel 4 on 10 June 2013, at 22:00 (BST), as part of its "Mating Season" programming, illustrating a series of first dates between online dating service users.

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Dave Goulson

Dave Goulson (born 1965) FRSE FRES University of Sussex, 2014.

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Dave Nellist

David John Nellist (born 16 July 1952) is a British Trotskyist activist who was the MP for the constituency of Coventry South East from 1983 to 1992.

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David Aaronovitch

David Morris Aaronovitch (born 8 July 1954) is an English journalist, television presenter and author.

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David and Frederick Barclay

Sir David Rowat Barclay and Sir Frederick Hugh Barclay (both born 27 October 1934), commonly referred to as the "Barclay Brothers" or "Barclay Twins", are British businessmen.

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David Astor

Francis David Langhorne Astor CH (5 March 1912 – 7 December 2001) was an English newspaper publisher and member of the Astor family.

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David Blunkett

David Blunkett, Baron Blunkett, (born 6 June 1947) is a former British politician, having represented the Sheffield Brightside and Hillsborough constituency for 28 years through to 7 May 2015 when he stepped down at the general election.

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David Burrowes

David John Barrington Burrowes (born 12 June 1969) is a British politician.

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David Cairns (writer)

David Adam Cairns CBE (born 8 June 1926, Loughton, Essex) is a British journalist, non-fiction writer and musician.

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David Carritt

Hugh David Graham Carritt (15 April 1927 – 3 August 1982) was a British art historian, dealer and critic, who was described by The New York Times as being "responsible for more sensational discoveries in the field of Old Master painting since World War II than any other man".

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David Cox (artist)

David Cox (29 April 1783 – 7 June 1859) was an English landscape painter, one of the most important members of the Birmingham School of landscape artists and an early precursor of Impressionism.

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David Heathcoat-Amory

David Philip Heathcoat-Amory (born 21 March 1949) is a British politician, accountant and farmer.

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David Inshaw

David Inshaw (born 21 March 1943 in Wednesfield, Staffordshire, England) is a British artist who sprang to public attention in 1973 when his painting The Badminton Game was exhibited at the ICA Summer Studio exhibition in London.

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David Messer

David Messer is an Australian cartoonist.

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David Mitchell (author)

David Stephen Mitchell (born 12 January 1969) is an English novelist.

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David Morley (writer)

David Morley (born March 1962) is a British writer and radio producer.

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David Peat (Royal Navy officer)

David Peat (1793–1879) was a Scottish officer in the Royal Navy who attained flag rank after his retirement.

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David Pryce-Jones

David Eugene Henry Pryce-Jones FRSL (born 15 February 1936) is a conservative British author and commentator.

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David Ramsbotham, Baron Ramsbotham

General David John Ramsbotham, Baron Ramsbotham (born 6 November 1934) is a retired British Army officer, who later served as Her Majesty's Chief Inspector of Prisons.

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David René de Rothschild

Baron David René James de Rothschild (born December 15, 1942) is a French banker and a member of the French branch of the Rothschild family.

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David Rennie (columnist)

David Rennie (born 1971) is a British journalist.

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David Russell (barrister)

David Graham Russell, (born 2 December 1950) is an Australian barrister who specialises in international tax law.

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David Shayler

David Shayler (born 24 December 1965) is a British former MI5 officer.

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David Steen (photographer)

David Steen (16 February 1936 – 16 November 2015) was a British photographer.

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David Szalay

David Szalay (born 1974 in Montreal, Quebec) is an English writer.

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David Tress

David Tress (born 11 April 1955) is a British artist noted particularly for his deeply personal interpretations of landscapes in and around his home in Pembrokeshire, southwest Wales.

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David Willetts

David Linsay Willetts, Baron Willetts, (born 9 March 1956) is an English Conservative Party politician, life peer, and academic.

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Dean Bertram

Dean Bertram is a freelance writer, filmmaker, and film festival director based in Sydney, Australia.

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Dean Godson

Dean Godson is the Director of the London-based think tank.

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Death of Alan Kurdi

Alan Kurdi (Alan Kurdî), initially reported as Aylan Kurdi, was a three-year-old Syrian boy of Kurdish ethnic background whose image made global headlines after he drowned on 2 September 2015 in the Mediterranean Sea.

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Deaths in December 2006

The following is a list of notable deaths in December 2006.

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Deaths in January 2017

The following is a list of notable deaths in January 2017.

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Deborah Bull

Deborah Bull, CBE (born 22 March 1963) is an English dancer, writer, and broadcaster and former creative director of the Royal Opera House.

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Deborah Cavendish, Duchess of Devonshire

Deborah Vivien Cavendish, Duchess of Devonshire, (born Deborah Freeman-Mitford; 31 March 1920 – 24 September 2014) was an English aristocrat, writer, memoirist and socialite.

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Deborah Ross (journalist)

Deborah Ross is a British journalist and author.

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December 1915

The following events occurred in December 1915.

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December 1930

The following events occurred in December 1930.

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Deep South: Four Seasons on Back Roads

Deep South: Four Seasons on Back Roads is a 2015 non-fiction book authored by Paul Theroux.

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Denise Dorrance

Denise Dorrance is an American-born cartoonist and illustrator who publishes under the name Dorrance.

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Dennis Parry

Dennis Arthur Parry (7 November 1912 - 21 June 1955) was a British novelist.

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Deobandi

Deobandi (Pashto and دیو بندی, دیو بندی, দেওবন্দী, देवबन्दी) is a revivalist movement within Sunni (primarily Hanafi) Islam.

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Department of Journalism, City University

The Department of Journalism at City, University of London, is a journalism school in London.

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Derek Savage (poet)

Derek Stanley Savage (6 March 1917 – 14 October 2007), was a pacifist poet and critic, and usually published as "D.S.Savage".

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Desmond Ackner, Baron Ackner

Desmond James Conrad Ackner, Baron Ackner, PC (18 September 1920 – 21 March 2006) was a British judge and Lord of Appeal in Ordinary.

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Desperate Remedies

Desperate Remedies is a novel by Thomas Hardy, published anonymously by Tinsley Brothers in 1871.

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Destiny, or The Attraction of Affinities

Destiny, or The Attraction of Affinities (1996) is a novel by John David Morley.

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Dhiren Bhagat

Dhiren Bhagat (1957–1988) was an Indian journalist and poet known for his provocative and distinctly unconventional conservatism.

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Diana Mitford

Diana, Lady Mosley (17 June 191011 August 2003), born Diana Freeman-Mitford and usually known as Diana Mitford, was one of Britain's noted Mitford sisters.

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Diane Abbott

Diane Julie Abbott (born 27 September 1953) is a British Labour Party politician who was appointed Shadow Home Secretary in October 2016.

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Diaries 1969–1979: The Python Years

Diaries 1969–1979: The Python Years, dedicated by Michael Palin to his mother and father, has reduced “mountains to molehills”, according to his own words, to take the reader inside the period of the author’s life that corresponds to the Monty Python era.

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Digby Anderson

Dr.

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Dinting Viaduct

Dinting Viaduct (also known as Dinting Arches) is a 19th-century railway viaduct in Glossopdale in Derbyshire, England, that carries the Glossop Line over a valley at the village of Dinting.

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Dizzy Heights

Dizzy Heights is the fourth studio album by British alternative rock band The Lightning Seeds, released in 1996, and reached No.

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Dmitri Shostakovich

Dmitri Dmitriyevich Shostakovich (Дми́трий Дми́триевич Шостако́вич|Dmitriy Dmitrievich Shostakovich,; 9 August 1975) was a Russian composer and pianist.

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Doctor Aybolit

Doctor Aybolit (Доктор Айболит, Aibolit) is a fictional character from the children's poems Aybolit and Barmaley by Korney Chukovsky, as far as the children's fantastic novel Doctor Aybolit of the same author.

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Doctor Dido

Doctor Dido is a historical novel by the British writer F. L. Lucas.

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Doctor Ox's Experiment (opera)

Doctor Ox's Experiment is an opera in two acts by Gavin Bryars.

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Dollar Academy

Dollar Academy, founded in 1818 by benefaction of trader John McNabb, is an independent co-educational day and boarding school in Scotland.

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Dollar, Clackmannanshire

Dollar (Dolair) is a small town in Clackmannanshire, Scotland.

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Dom Joly

Dominic John Romulus Joly (born 15 November 1967) is an English television comedian and journalist, best known as the star of Trigger Happy TV, a hidden camera show that was sold to over seventy countries worldwide.

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Dominic Cummings

Dominic Mckenzie Cummings (born November 1971) is a British political advisor and strategist.

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Dominic Frisby

Dominic Frisby (born 1969) is a British author, comedian and voice actor.

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Dominic Lawson

Dominic Ralph Campden Lawson (born 17 December 1956 in Wandsworth, London) is an English journalist.

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Dominic Raab

Dominic Rennie Raab (born 25 February 1974) is a British Conservative Party politician.

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Dominic Selwood

Dominic Selwood, FSA, FRSA, FRHistS (born December 1970) is an English historian, journalist, author and barrister.

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Don Manley

Don Manley (born 2 June 1945) is a long-serving setter of crosswords in the UK.

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Donald F. Bond

Donald F. Bond (27 November 1898 - March 1987) was professor emeritus of English at the University of Chicago.

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Donald Hankey

Donald William Alers Hankey (27 October 1884 – 12 October 1916) was an English soldier best known for two volumes of essays about the British volunteer army in World War I both titled A Student in Arms.

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Donald Rooum

Donald Rooum (born 20 April 1928) is an English anarchist cartoonist and writer.

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Donald Sinclair (hotel owner)

Donald William Sinclair (10 July 1909 – 1981) was the co–proprietor of the Gleneagles Hotel in Torquay, England.

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Dood Water

Dood Water is a 1934 Dutch drama film directed by Gerard Rutten.

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Dorothea Mackellar

Isobel Marion Dorothea Mackellar (better known as Dorothea Mackellar), OBE (1 July 1885 – 14 January 1968) was an Australian poet and fiction writer.

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Dorothy Cowlin

Dorothy Cowlin (16 August 1911 – 10 January 2010) was a British novelist, poet, newspaper columnist and article writer with strong associations to North Yorkshire.

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Dorothy King

Dorothy Louise Victoria Lobel King (born 1975) is an American author and archeologist who lives and works in England.

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Dorothy L. Sayers

Dorothy Leigh Sayers (13 June 1893 – 17 December 1957) was a renowned English crime writer and poet.

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Dorset Opera Festival

Dorset Opera Festival is an annual country house opera festival combining amateur and professional performers, which takes place at Bryanston near Blandford Forum in Dorset, England.

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Double Falsehood

Double Falsehood (archaic spelling: Double Falshood) or The Distrest Lovers is an early 18th-century play by the English writer and playwright Lewis Theobald, although the authorship has been contested ever since the play was first published, with some scholars considering that it may have been written by John Fletcher and William Shakespeare.

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Doughty Street

Doughty Street is a broad tree-lined street in the Holborn district of the London Borough of Camden.

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Douglas Carswell

John Douglas Wilson Carswell (born 3 May 1971) is a British politician who in 2014 became the first elected Member of Parliament for the UK Independence Party (UKIP), representing Clacton.

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Douglas Coupland

Douglas CouplandSteve Lohr, "No More McJobs for Mr.

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Douglas Murray (author)

Douglas Kear Murray (born 16 July 1979) is a British author, journalist, and political commentator.

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Dugald Sutherland MacColl

Dugald Sutherland MacColl (10 March 1859 – 21 December 1948) was a Scottish watercolour painter, art critic, lecturer and writer.

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Duke of Denver

The fictitious title of Duke of Denver was created by Dorothy Sayers for the family of Lord Peter Wimsey.

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Duncan Fallowell

Duncan Fallowell is an English novelist, travel writer, journalist and critic (see also entries in Oxford Companion to English Literature, 7th edition; and current Who's Who).

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Dylan Jones

Dylan John Jones OBE (born 1960) is an English journalist and author who has served as editor of the UK version of men's fashion and lifestyle magazine GQ since 1999.

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Dylan Thomas

Dylan Marlais Thomas (27 October 1914 – 9 November 1953) was a Welsh poet and writer whose works include the poems "Do not go gentle into that good night" and "And death shall have no dominion"; the 'play for voices' Under Milk Wood; and stories and radio broadcasts such as A Child's Christmas in Wales and Portrait of the Artist as a Young Dog.

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Dyneley Hussey

Dyneley Hussey (27 February 1893 – 6 September 1972) was an English war poet, journalist, art critic and music critic.

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E. B. C. Jones

E.

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E. Beresford Chancellor

Edwin Beresford Chancellor FRHS FSA (1868 - 4 February 1937) was an English author known for his works on the history of London and it environs.

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E. W. Hornung

Ernest William Hornung (7 June 1866 – 22 March 1921) was an English author and poet known for writing the A. J. Raffles series of stories about a gentleman thief in late 19th-century London.

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Eamon Delaney

Eamon Delaney (born 14 July 1962) is an Irish newspaper columnist, author, editor, novelist, journalist and former diplomat.

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East India Arms

The East India Arms is a pub in the City of London.

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Eclipse of the Sun (novel)

Eclipse of the Sun is the debut novel by English author Phil Whitaker.

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Ed Balls document leak

The Ed Balls document leak was a political controversy in the United Kingdom that arose on 9 June 2011.

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Ed Waugh and Trevor Wood

Ed Waugh and Trevor Wood are British playwrights.

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Ed West (journalist)

Ed West is an author, journalist and blogger, who is the deputy editor of The Catholic Herald.

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Edgar Lustgarten

Edgar Marcus Lustgarten (3 May 1907 – 15 December 1978) was a British broadcaster and noted crime writer.

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Edith Charlotte Brown

Edith Charlotte Brown, née Hubback (born 1876, died 1945), also known as Mrs Francis Brown, was an English writer whose works were connected to Jane Austen, her great-great-aunt.

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Edith Pechey

Edith Pechey (7 October 1845 – 14 April 1908) was one of the first women doctors in the United Kingdom and a campaigner for women's rights.

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Edmond Modeste Lescarbault

Edmond Modeste Lescarbault (1814, Châteaudun - 1894), was a French doctor and an amateur astronomer, best remembered for his 1859 supposed observation of the non-existent planet Vulcan.

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EdStone

The "EdStone" was a large stone tablet which was commissioned by the Labour Party during the United Kingdom general election, 2015.

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Education in Sweden

Education in Sweden is mandatory for all children between age 6 and age 16.

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Edward Adeane

George Edward Adeane, (4 October 1939 – 20 May 2015) was Private Secretary to the Prince of Wales from 1979 to 1985.

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Edward Atiyah

Edward Selim Atiyah (Arabic: ادوار سليم عطية‎; 1903–1964) was an Anglo-Lebanese author and political activist.

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Edward Auchmuty Glover

Edward Auchmuty Glover (– 17 March 1862) was an Irish Independent Conservative politician and barrister.

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Edward Chaney

Edward Chaney PhD FSA FRHistS (born 1951) is a British cultural historian.

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Edward Dicey

Edward James Stephen Dicey (15 May 1832 – 7 July 1911) was an English writer, journalist, and editor.

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Edward Greenfield

Edward Harry Greenfield OBE (3 July 1928 – 1 July 2015) was an English music critic and broadcaster.

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Edward Russell, 26th Baron de Clifford

Lieutenant Colonel Edward Southwell Russell, 26th Baron de Clifford, OBE, TD (31 January 1907 – 3 January 1982), was the only son of Jack Southwell Russell, 25th Baron de Clifford, and Eva Carrington.

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Edward Taylor (music writer)

Edward Taylor (1784–1863) was an English singer, writer on music, and Gresham Professor of Music from 1837.

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Edwin James (barrister)

Edwin John James QC (c.1812 – 4 March 1882) was an English lawyer who also practised in the U.S., a Member of Parliament and would-be actor.

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El Sistema

El Sistema is a publicly financed voluntary sector music education program in Venezuela, founded in 1975 by Venezuelan educator, musician and activist José Antonio AbreuLesniak which later adopted the motto "Music for Social Change".

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Elaine Paige

Elaine Paige (born Elaine Jill Bickerstaff, 5 March 1948) is an English singer and actress best known for her work in musical theatre.

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Eleanor Beardsley

Eleanor Beardsley is a correspondent based in Paris covering French society, politics, economics, culture and gastronomy for National Public Radio.

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Eliza Acton

Elizabeth "Eliza" Acton (17 April 1799 – 13 February 1859) was an English food writer and poet, who produced one of Britain's first cookbooks aimed at the domestic reader, Modern Cookery for Private Families.

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Elizabeth David

Elizabeth David, CBE (born Elizabeth Gwynne, 26 December 1913 – 22 May 1992) was a British cookery writer.

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Elizabeth David bibliography

Elizabeth David, the British cookery writer, published eight books in the 34 years between 1950 and 1984; the last was issued eight years before her death.

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Elizabeth R: A Year in the Life of the Queen

Elizabeth R is a 1992 television documentary film about Queen Elizabeth II.

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Elizabeth Truss

Mary Elizabeth Truss (born 26 July 1975), known as Liz Truss, is a British Conservative Party politician and Chief Secretary to the Treasury who has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for South West Norfolk since 2010.

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Elspeth Douglas McClelland

Elspeth Douglas McClelland (1879–1920) was an English suffragette and architect.

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Emilie Barrington

Emilie Isabel Barrington (18 October 1841 – 9 March 1933), was a British biographer and novelist.

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Emily Hester Brodrick

Emily Hester Brodrick, name before marriage Emily Hester Melvill (1846–1906) was an English writer.

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Emily Maitlis

Emily Maitlis (born 6 September 1970) is a British journalist, documentary-maker and newsreader for the BBC.

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Emma Gilbey Keller

Emma Gilbey Keller is an author and journalist, based in New York City.

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Emmelie de Forest

Emmelie Charlotte-Victoria de Forest (born 28 February 1993) is a Danish singer and songwriter.

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Empathizing–systemizing theory

The empathizing–systemizing (E–S) theory suggests that people may be classified on the basis of their scores along two dimensions: empathizing (E) and systemizing (S).

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Empress Dowager Cixi

Empress Dowager Cixi1 (Manchu: Tsysi taiheo; 29 November 1835 – 15 November 1908), of the Manchu Yehenara clan, was a Chinese empress dowager and regent who effectively controlled the Chinese government in the late Qing dynasty for 47 years from 1861 until her death in 1908.

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Encounter (magazine)

Encounter was a literary magazine, founded in 1953 by poet Stephen Spender and journalist Irving Kristol.

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Endorsements in the Labour Party (UK) leadership election, 2015

The following list contains a run down of politicians, individuals, Constituency Labour Parties, trade unions (both Labour Party affiliated and not), Socialist Societies, newspapers, magazines and other organisations that endorsed a candidate in the Labour Party (UK) leadership election, 2015.

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Endorsements in the United Kingdom European Union membership referendum, 2016

A number of politicians, public figures, newspapers and magazines, businesses and other organisations endorsed either the United Kingdom remaining in the EU or the United Kingdom leaving the EU during the United Kingdom European Union membership referendum, 2016.

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Endorsements in the United Kingdom general election, 2010

During the 2010 United Kingdom general election, a number of newspapers made endorsements of a political party.

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Endorsements in the United Kingdom general election, 2015

Various newspapers, organisations and individuals endorsed parties or individual candidates for the United Kingdom general election, 2015.

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Endorsements in the United Kingdom general election, 2017

Various newspapers, organisations and individuals endorsed parties or individual candidates for the 2017 United Kingdom general election.

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English independence

English independence is a political stance advocating secession of England, the largest and most populous country of the British Isles, from the United Kingdom.

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English National Opera

English National Opera (ENO) is an opera company based in London, resident at the London Coliseum in St. Martin's Lane.

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English people

The English are a nation and an ethnic group native to England who speak the English language. The English identity is of early medieval origin, when they were known in Old English as the Angelcynn ("family of the Angles"). Their ethnonym is derived from the Angles, one of the Germanic peoples who migrated to Great Britain around the 5th century AD. England is one of the countries of the United Kingdom, and the majority of people living there are British citizens. Historically, the English population is descended from several peoples the earlier Celtic Britons (or Brythons) and the Germanic tribes that settled in Britain following the withdrawal of the Romans, including Angles, Saxons, Jutes and Frisians. Collectively known as the Anglo-Saxons, they founded what was to become England (from the Old English Englaland) along with the later Danes, Anglo-Normans and other groups. In the Acts of Union 1707, the Kingdom of England was succeeded by the Kingdom of Great Britain. Over the years, English customs and identity have become fairly closely aligned with British customs and identity in general. Today many English people have recent forebears from other parts of the United Kingdom, while some are also descended from more recent immigrants from other European countries and from the Commonwealth. The English people are the source of the English language, the Westminster system, the common law system and numerous major sports such as cricket, football, rugby union, rugby league and tennis. These and other English cultural characteristics have spread worldwide, in part as a result of the former British Empire.

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Episode (film)

Episode is an Austrian film from 1935.

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Erasmus Darwin Barlow

Erasmus Darwin Barlow, FRCPsych, FZS (15 April 1915 – 2 August 2005) was a British psychiatrist, physiologist and businessman.

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Erema

Erema; or, my father's sin is a three-volume novel by R. D. Blackmore published in 1877.

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Eric Ellis (journalist)

Eric Ellis is a journalist who writes about the politics, economics and societies of South and South-East Asia.

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Eric Hobsbawm

Eric John Ernest Hobsbawm (9 June 1917 – 1 October 2012) was a British historian of the rise of industrial capitalism, socialism and nationalism.

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Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn

Erik Maria Ritter von Kuehnelt-Leddihn (born July 31, 1909 in Tobelbad, Styria, Austria-Hungary; died May 26, 1999, in Lans, Tyrol) was an Austrian political scientist and journalist.

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Erskine Barton Childers

Erskine Barton Childers (11 March 1929 – 25 August 1996) was an Irish writer, BBC correspondent and United Nations senior civil servant.

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Ethel Anderson

Ethel Campbell Louise Anderson (née Mason) (16 March 1883 – 4 August 1958) was an early twentieth century Australian poet, essayist, novelist and painter.

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Ethel Proudlock case

The Ethel Proudlock case refers to Ethel Proudlock's 1911 trial for murder which took place in Kuala Lumpur, FMS (now Malaysia).

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Eton College

Eton College is an English independent boarding school for boys in Eton, Berkshire, near Windsor.

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Eugene Chantrelle

Eugene Marie Chantrelle (born Nantes 1834, died Edinburgh 31 May 1878) was a French teacher who lived in Edinburgh and who was convicted for the murder of his wife, Elizabeth Dyer.

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Euston Arch

The Euston Arch, built in 1837, was the original entrance to Euston station, facing onto Drummond Street, London.

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Euthanasia

Euthanasia (from εὐθανασία; "good death": εὖ, eu; "well" or "good" – θάνατος, thanatos; "death") is the practice of intentionally ending a life to relieve pain and suffering.

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Eva Schmidt-Kolmer

Eva Schmidt-Kolmer (25 June 1913 - 29 August 1991) was an Austrian-German physician, university teacher and social psychologist.

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Evelyn Herlitzius

Evelyn Herlitzius (born 27 April 1963) is a German opera singer, a dramatic soprano.

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Evelyn Underhill

Evelyn Underhill (6 December 1875 – 15 June 1941) was an English Anglo-Catholic writer and pacifist known for her numerous works on religion and spiritual practice, in particular Christian mysticism.

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Evelyn Waugh

Arthur Evelyn St.

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Evelyn Wrench

Sir John Evelyn Leslie Wrench, CMG, LLD (1882–1966), was a British author and the founder of the Royal Over-Seas League and the English-Speaking Union.

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Exact Editions

Exact Editions is an integrated content management platform for magazine and book publishers.

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Exodus: How Migration Is Changing Our World

Exodus: How Migration is Changing Our World (titled Exodus: Immigration and Multiculturalism in the 21st Century for its UK release) is a 2013 book by the development economist Paul Collier about the way migration affects migrants as well as the countries that send and receive the migrants, and the implications this has for development economics and the quest to end poverty.

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Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close

Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close is a 2005 novel by Jonathan Safran Foer.

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Eyes Without a Face

Eyes Without a Face (Les Yeux sans visage) is a 1960 horror film adaptation of Jean Redon's novel, directed by Georges Franju, and starring Pierre Brasseur and Alida Valli.

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Ezra Nawi

Ezra Yitzhak Nawi (עזרא יצחק נאווי; born 1952) is an Israeli Mizrahi Jew, left-wing, human rights activist and pacifist.

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F. L. Lucas

Frank Laurence Lucas (28 December 1894 – 1 June 1967) was an English classical scholar, literary critic, poet, novelist, playwright, political polemicist, Fellow of King's College, Cambridge, and intelligence officer at Bletchley Park during World War II.

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Fabian Society

The Fabian Society is a British socialist organization whose purpose is to advance the principles of democratic socialism via gradualist and reformist effort in democracies, rather than by revolutionary overthrow.

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Fabrice Bollon

Fabrice Bollon (born Paris, 1965) is a French conductor.

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Faculty of History, University of Oxford

The Faculty of History at the University of Oxford organises that institution's teaching and research in modern history.

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Family of Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge

Members of the Middleton family have been related to the British royal family by marriage since the wedding of Catherine Middleton and Prince William in April 2011, when she became the Duchess of Cambridge.

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Faringdon

Faringdon is a historic market town in the Vale of White Horse, Oxfordshire, England.

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Faringdon House

Faringdon House is a Grade I listed 14,510 square feet house in Faringdon, Oxfordshire, England.

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Fawlty Towers

Fawlty Towers is a British television sitcom broadcast on BBC2 in 1975 and 1979.

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Fay Weldon

Fay Weldon CBE FRSL (born 22 September 1931) is an English author, essayist, feminist and playwright.

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Felicity Dean

Felicity Jane Dean (born 24 January 1959) is a British actress who is critically acclaimed in both film and stage.

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Felix Felton

Felix Felton (born Robert Forbes Felton, 12 August 1911 – 21 October 1972) was a British film, television, stage and voice actor as well as a radio director, composer and author.

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Fen Tigers

The Fen Tigers are the people who live and work in the fenlands of East Anglia As a result, Fen Tigers or Fen Tiger may also refer to other local groups and individuals.

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Fences and Windows

Fences and Windows: Dispatches from the Front Lines of the Globalization Debate is a 2002 book by Canadian journalist Naomi Klein and editor Debra Ann Levy.

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Feral (Monbiot book)

Feral is a book about rewilding by the British environmentalist George Monbiot.

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Florence Caddy

Florence Caddy (1837–1923) was an English non-fiction writer from Middlesex.

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Florence Hayward (writer)

Florence Hayward (1855 - July 4, 1925) was a St.

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Florence Nagle

Florence Nagle (26 October 1894 – 30 October 1988) was a trainer and breeder of racehorses, a breeder of pedigree dogs, and an active feminist.

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For Your Eyes Only (short story collection)

For Your Eyes Only is a collection of short stories by the British author Ian Fleming, featuring the fictional British Secret Service agent Commander James Bond.

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Forest Whitaker

Forest Steven Whitaker III (born July 15, 1961) is an American actor, producer, and director.

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Fort Belvedere, Surrey

Fort Belvedere (originally Shrubs Hill Tower) is a Grade II* listed country house on Shrubs Hill in Windsor Great Park, in Surrey, England.

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Four Men in Prison

Four Men In Prison is a 1950 documentary film about English prison conditions directed by Max Anderson.

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Fowler's match

Fowler's match is the name given to the two-day Eton v Harrow cricket match held at Lord's on Friday 8 and Saturday 9 July 1910.

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François Georges-Picot

François Marie Denis Georges-Picot (21 December 1870 in Paris – 20 June 1951 in Paris) was a French diplomat and lawyer who negotiated the Sykes–Picot Agreement with the English diplomat Sir Mark Sykes between November 1915 and March 1916 before its signing on May 16, 1916.

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Frances Cashel Hoey

Frances Cashel Hoey (née Johnston; 14 February 1830 – 8 July 1908), pseudonyms Cashel Hoey and Frances Cashel Hoey, was an Irish novelist, journalist and translator.

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Frances Wynne

Frances Wynne (1863 – August 1893) was a 19th-century Irish poet.

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Francis Davison

Francis Davison (1919–1984) was a British visual artist and painter.

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Francis Godolphin Waldron

Francis Godolphin Waldron (1744–1818) was an English writer and actor, known also as an editor and bookseller.

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Francis Hyett

Sir Francis Adams Hyett (1844–1941) was chairman of Gloucestershire County Council from 1918 to 1920.

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Francis Johnson (architect)

See Francis Johnston (architect) for Irish architect of similar name. Francis Frederick Johnson CBE, (18 April 1911 – 29 September 1995), was an English architect, born in Bridlington in the East Riding of Yorkshire.

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Francis Pike

Francis Pike (born 13 February 1954) is a British historian and business, economic and political advisor.

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Francis Stacey

Francis Edmund Stacey (18 August 1830 – 3 October 1885) was a Welsh-born law officer and a cricketer who played first-class cricket in 15 matches for Cambridge University, the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) and the Gentlemen of England side.

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Francis Yeats-Brown

Major Francis Charles Claypon Yeats-Brown, DFC (15 August 1886 – 19 December 1944) was an officer in the British Indian army and the author of the memoir The Lives of a Bengal Lancer, for which he was awarded the 1930 James Tait Black Memorial Prize.

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Franciszek Bohomolec

Franciszek Bohomolec h. Bogoria (29 January 1720 – 24 April 1784) was a Polish dramatist, linguist, and theatrical reformer who was one of the principal playwrights of the Polish Enlightenment.

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Frank Crisp

Sir Frank Crisp, Kt., 1st Baronet, (25 October 1843 in London – 29 April 1919) was an English lawyer and microscopist.

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Frank Johnson (journalist)

Frank Robert Johnson (20 January 1943 – 15 December 2006) was an English journalist.

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Frank Keating (journalist)

Francis Vincent "Frank" Keating (4 October 1937 – 25 January 2013) was an English sports journalist and author, who was best known for his regular columns in The Guardian newspaper.

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Frank Laskier

Frank Laskier (1912 – 8 July 1949) was a British seaman who came to public attention during World War II.

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Frank Maguire (politician)

Meredith Francis Maguire (2 September 1929 – 5 March 1981) was an Irish Republican who became an Independent Member of the British Parliament.

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Frank Schuster (music patron)

Frank Schuster (24 September 1852 – 26 December 1927), was a British music-lover and patron of the arts.

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Franz Cramer

Franz or François Cramer (17721 August 1848) was an English violinist and conductor who was Master of the King's/Queen's Musick from 1834 until his death.

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Fraser Nelson

Fraser Andrew Nelson (born 14 May 1973) is a Scottish political journalist and editor of The Spectator magazine.

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Freddie Mercury

Freddie Mercury (born Farrokh Bulsara; 5 September 194624 November 1991) was a British singer, songwriter and record producer, best known as the lead vocalist of the rock band Queen.

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Frederick Lucas

Frederick Lucas (30 March 1812 – 22 October 1855) was a British religious polemicist and founder of The Tablet.

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Frederick Peisley

Frederick Walter James Peisley (6 December 1904 – 22 March 1975) was a British stage, film and television actor and theatre director whose career spanned five decades.

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Frederick Wedmore

Frederick Wedmore (9 July 1844 – 25 February 1921) was an English art critic and man of letters.

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Freedom Press

Freedom Press is an anarchist publishing house in Whitechapel, London, United Kingdom.

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From Bryan to Stalin

From Bryan to Stalin is the first volume of political memoirs published by the American radical trade union organizer William Z. Foster (1881-–1961).

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From Here to Eternity the Musical

From Here to Eternity the Musical is a musical with music and lyrics by Stuart Brayson and Tim Rice and a book by Bill Oakes.

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Frome by-election, 1854

The Frome by-election of 1854 was a parliamentary by-election held in England on 24 October 1854 for the House of Commons constituency of Frome, a parliamentary borough in Somerset.

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Front Row (radio)

Front Row is a radio programme broadcast on BBC Radio 4 that has been broadcast since 1998.

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Gaberbocchus Press

The Gaberbocchus Press was a London publishing company founded in 1948 by the couple Stefan and Franciszka Themerson.

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Gabriel Gbadamosi

Gabriel Gbadamosi is a poet, playwright and novelist of Irish-Nigerian descent.

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Gabriela Trzebinski

Gabriela Trzebinski (born 1962) is an African artist of European heritage based in Houston, Texas, United States.

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Gabriele Annan

Gabriele Annan (née Ullstein, 1921–2013), was a German-born British author and literary and film critic, and the wife of the military intelligence officer, author, and academic Noel Annan, Baron Annan.

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Gas Stokers' strike

Gas Stokers' strike of 1872 was a serious political disturbance in the industrial south-eastern districts of Victorian London involving Trade Unionists, striking to assert their rights.

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Gavin Mortimer

Gavin Nicholas Mortimer is a British writer and historian, specialising in World War Two Special Forces.

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Gay Life (TV series)

Gay Life was a television programme broadcast by London Weekend Television (LWT) in 1980 and 1981.

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GCE Ordinary Level (United Kingdom)

The General Certificate of Education (GCE) Ordinary Level, also called the O-level or O level, was a subject-based academic qualification.

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Generation Snowflake

Generation Snowflake, or Snowflake Generation, is a neologistic term used to characterize the young adults of the 2010s as being more prone to taking offence and less resilient than previous generations, or as being too emotionally vulnerable to cope with views that challenge their own.

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Generation War

Generation War (Unsere Mütter, unsere Väter, literally "Our mothers, our fathers") is a German World War II TV miniseries in three parts.

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Geoffrey Wheatcroft

Geoffrey Albert Wheatcroft (born 23 December 1945 in London) is a British journalist and writer.

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Geographical (magazine)

Geographical (formerly The Geographical Magazine) is the magazine of the Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers), a key associate and supporter of many famous expeditions, including those of Charles Darwin, Robert Falcon Scott and Ernest Shackleton.

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Geology of Scotland

The geology of Scotland is unusually varied for a country of its size, with a large number of differing geological features.

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George Bell (bishop)

George Kennedy Allen Bell (4 February 1883 – 3 October 1958) was an Anglican theologian, Dean of Canterbury, Bishop of Chichester, member of the House of Lords and a pioneer of the ecumenical movement.

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George Brimley

George Brimley (29 December 1819, Cambridge - 29 May 1857) was an English essayist.

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George Chichester, 5th Marquess of Donegall

George Augustus Hamilton Chichester, 5th Marquess of Donegall (27 June 1822 – 13 May 1904) was an Anglo-Irish soldier and company promoter who became an Irish and British peer, with a seat in the House of Lords.

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George Gale (journalist)

George Gale (1927–1990) was a British journalist who was editor of the British political magazine The Spectator from 1970 to 1973.

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George Galloway

George Galloway (born 16 August 1954) is a British politician, broadcaster and writer.

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George Grote

George Grote (17 November 1794 – 18 June 1871) was an English political radical and classical historian.

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George Grove

Sir George Grove, CB (13 August 1820 – 28 May 1900) was an English writer on music, known as the founding editor of Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians.

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George Hall (British administrator)

George Hall Esq. was a British administrator in the 19th century.

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George Hay, 3rd Earl of Kinnoull

George Hay, 3rd Earl of Kinnoull (d. 1650) was a Scottish peer and military officer.

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George Hay, 5th Earl of Kinnoull

George Hay, 5th Earl of Kinnoull (d. 1687) was a Scottish peer and soldier.

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George Hay, 7th Earl of Erroll

George Hay, 7th Earl of Erroll (– 30 January 1573) was a Scottish nobleman and politician.

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George Hay, 8th Earl of Kinnoull

George Henry Hay, 8th Earl of Kinnoull (23 June 1689 – 28 July 1758), styled as Viscount Dupplin from 1709 to 1719, was a British peer and diplomat.

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George Hayne

George Hayne (died 1723) was a merchant and entrepreneur who was responsible for the creation of the Trent Navigation in England and hence the development of Burton upon Trent as the pre-eminent beer brewing and exporting town.

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George Hussey Packe

George Hussey Packe (1 May 1796 – 2 July 1874) was a United Kingdom Member of Parliament, an army officer present at the Battle of Waterloo, and was instrumental in establishing the Great Northern Railway.

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George McCoy

George McCoy is a British writer best known for producing McCoy's British Massage Parlour Guide, a series of guidebooks to establishments and women in Britain that provide sexual services.

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George Monbiot

George Joshua Richard Monbiot (born 27 January 1963) is a British writer known for his environmental, political activism.

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George Orwell bibliography

The bibliography of George Orwell includes journalism, essays, novels and non-fiction books written by the British writer Eric Blair (1903–50), either under his own name or, more usually, under his pen name George Orwell.

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George Smart (tailor)

George Smart (1774-1846) was an English tailor and Folk Artist notable for his cloth collage portraits and felt covered dummyboards.

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George Smiley

George Smiley OBE is a fictional character created by John le Carré.

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George Worsley Adamson

George Worsley Adamson, RE, MCSD (7 February 1913 – 5 March 2005) was a book illustrator, writer, and cartoonist, who held American and British dual citizenship from 1931.

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Georgia Flood

Georgia Flood (born 1992/93) is an Australian film, television and theatre actress.

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Gerald FitzGibbon (Irish lawyer)

Gerald FitzGibbon PC (1837 – 14 October 1909) was an Irish barrister and judge, who is regarded as one of the outstanding Irish jurists of his time.

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Gerald Hamilton

Gerald Bernard Francis Hamilton (1 November 1890 – 1970) was a British memoirist, critic and internationalist known as "the wickedest man in Europe".

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Gerald Warner

James Gerald Warner of Craigenmaddie (born 1945) is a Scottish newspaper columnist, author, broadcaster, commentator, and former policy adviser to Michael Forsyth when he was Secretary of State for Scotland.

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Geraldine McEwan

Geraldine McEwan (born Geraldine McKeown; 9 May 1932 – 30 January 2015) was an English actress who had a long career in theatre, television and film.

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Gertrude Atherton

Gertrude Franklin Horn Atherton (October 30, 1857 – June 14, 1948) was an American author.

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Get Britain Out

Get Britain Out, formerly the Anti-Common Market League (ACML), is a British Eurosceptic organisation.

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Gezi Park protests

A wave of demonstrations and civil unrest in Turkey began on 28 May 2013, initially to contest the urban development plan for Istanbul's Taksim Gezi Park.

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Gideon Haigh

Gideon Clifford Jeffrey Davidson Haigh (born 29 December 1965) is an English-born Australian journalist who writes about sport (especially cricket) and business.

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Gilad Atzmon

Gilad Atzmon (גלעד עצמון; born 9 June 1963) is a British jazz saxophonist, novelist, political activist and writer, originally from Israel.

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Gilbert Beyfus

Gilbert Hugh Beyfus (1885-1960) was an English barrister whose clients included Liberace, John Aspinall and Aneurin Bevan.

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Giles Gordon

Giles Alexander Esmé Gordon (23 May 1940 – 14 November 2003) was a Scottish literary agent and writer, based for most of his career in London.

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Girl Pat

Girl Pat was a small fishing trawler, based at the Lincolnshire port of Grimsby, that in 1936 was the subject of a media sensation when its captain took it on an unauthorised transatlantic voyage.

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Gita Sahgal

Gita Sahgal (Nastaleeq)), born in Bombay, India, is a writer and journalist on issues of feminism, fundamentalism, and racism, a documentary films director, and a women's rights and human rights activist.

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Giza Plateau

The Giza Plateau (جيزة بلاتي) is a plateau that is located in Giza, Egypt.

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Glan Williams

Glan Williams (born 1 September 1911 in Pentrechwyth, Wales; died June 1986 in London) was a British caricaturist.

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Glasgow University Guardian

The Glasgow Guardian is the student newspaper of the University of Glasgow.

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Glen Tilt

Glen Tilt (Scottish Gaelic: Gleann Teilt) is a glen in the extreme north of Perthshire, Scotland.

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Global warming conspiracy theory

A global warming conspiracy theory invokes claims that the scientific consensus on global warming is based on conspiracies to produce manipulated data or suppress dissent.

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Globalization

Globalization or globalisation is the process of interaction and integration between people, companies, and governments worldwide.

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Go Set a Watchman

Go Set a Watchman is a novel by Harper Lee published on July 14, 2015 by HarperCollins, United States and William Heinemann, United Kingdom.

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Godalming College

Godalming College is a sixth form college, situated in Godalming, south-west of London and five miles from Guildford, Surrey.

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Goronwy Rees

Goronwy Rees (29 November 1909 – 12 December 1979) was a Welsh journalist, academic and writer.

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Graham Brady

Sir Graham Stuart Brady (born 20 May 1967) is a British Conservative Party politician and the Member of Parliament (MP) for Altrincham and Sale West since 1997.

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Graham Greene

Henry Graham Greene (2 October 1904 – 3 April 1991), better known by his pen name Graham Greene, was an English novelist regarded by many as one of the greatest writers of the 20th century.

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Graham Russell Mitchell

Graham Russell Mitchell OBE, CB (1905–1984), was an officer of MI5, the British Security Service, between 1939 and 1963, serving as its deputy director general between 1956 and 1963.

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Grandma (film)

Grandma is a 2015 American comedy-drama film written, directed and produced by Paul Weitz.

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Great God Gold

Great God Gold is a 1935 film.

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Great Leap Forward

The Great Leap Forward of the People's Republic of China (PRC) was an economic and social campaign by the Communist Party of China (CPC) from 1958 to 1962.

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Greenways School

Greenways School, also known as Greenways Preparatory School, was an English prep school, founded at Bognor Regis, Sussex, before the Second World War.

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Greenwich (UK Parliament constituency)

Greenwich was a parliamentary constituency in south-east London, which returned Members of Parliament to the House of Commons of the UK Parliament from 1832 to 1997 (by the first past the post system).

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Gregorio Pietro Agagianian

Gregorio Pietro XV Agagianian (anglicized: Gregory Peter; Western Գրիգոր Պետրոս ԺԵ., Krikor Bedros ŽĒ. Aghajanian; 18 September 1895 – 16 May 1971) was an Armenian Cardinal of the Catholic Church.

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Greville Poke

Greville John Poke (19 August 1912 – 4 March 2000) was an arts administrator and a founding member of the English Stage Company.

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Grimeborn

Grimeborn is an annual East London musical theatre and opera festival which coincides with the world famous East Sussex Glyndebourne Opera Festival.

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Guardians of Power

Guardians of Power: The Myth of the Liberal Media is a book by David Edwards and David Cromwell, editors of the British media analysis Media Lens website, published in 2006 by Pluto Press of London.

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Guatoque - Veraguas (TransMilenio)

The simple station without exchange Guatoque - Veraguas, forms part of the TransMilenio mass transit system of Bogota inaugurated in the year 2000.

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Guy Scott

Guy Lindsay Scott (born 1 June 1944) is a Zambian politician who was the acting President of Zambia between October 2014 and January 2015 and as the 12th Vice-President of Zambia from 2011 to 2014.

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H. H. Asquith

Herbert Henry Asquith, 1st Earl of Oxford and Asquith, (12 September 1852 – 15 February 1928), generally known as H. H. Asquith, was a British statesman of the Liberal Party who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1908 to 1916.

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H. J. Massingham

Harold John Massingham (25 March 1888 – 22 August 1952) was a prolific British writer on ruralism, matters to do with the countryside and agriculture.

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Hal Gibson Pateshall Colebatch

Hal Gibson Pateshall Colebatch (born 7 October 1945), also known as Hal G. P. Colebatch and Hal Colebatch is an Australian author, poet, lecturer, journalist, editor, and lawyer.

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Halla Diyab

Dr.

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Hamlet (Dean)

Hamlet is an opera in two acts by Australian composer Brett Dean, with an English libretto by Matthew Jocelyn, which is based on William Shakespeare's play of the same name.

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Hangover Square

Hangover Square is a 1941 novel by English playwright and novelist Patrick Hamilton (1904–1962).

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Hannah Mary Rothschild

Hannah Mary Rothschild CBE (born 22 May 1962) is a British writer, philanthropist and documentary filmmaker.

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Hans Heinrich Thyssen-Bornemisza

Hans Henrik Ágost Gábor, Baron Thyssen-Bornemisza de Kászon et Impérfalva (13 April 1921 – 26 April 2002), a noted industrialist and art collector, was a Dutch-born Swiss citizen with a Hungarian title, a legal resident of Monaco for tax purposes, with a declared second residency in the United Kingdom, but in actuality a long-time resident of Spain, and son of a German father and a Hungarian and English American mother (related to Daniel M. Frost and John Kerry).

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Hapgood (play)

Hapgood is a play by Tom Stoppard, first produced in 1988.

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Hard Cash (novel)

Hard Cash, A Matter-of-Fact Romance is an 1863 novel by Charles Reade.

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Hardeep Singh Kohli

Hardeep Singh Kohli (born 21 January 1969) is a British presenter of Sikh heritage who has appeared on radio and television.

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Hark, Hark! The Dogs Do Bark

"Hark, Hark! The Dogs Do Bark" is an English nursery rhyme.

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Harold Creighton

Harold Digby Fitzgerald Creighton (11 September 1927 – 3 July 2003) was a British businessman and machine tool pioneer, who bought The Spectator magazine in 1967 for £75,000.

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Harold Nicolson

Sir Harold George Nicolson (21 November 1886 – 1 May 1968) was a British diplomat, author, diarist and politician.

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Harriet Harman

Harriet Ruth Harman (born 30 July 1950) is a British solicitor and Labour Party politician who has served as the Member of Parliament since 1982, first for Peckham, and then for its successor constituency of Camberwell and Peckham since 1997.

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Harry Becker (artist)

Harry Becker (1865–1928) was an English painter, draughtsman and printmaker from East Anglia.

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Harry Bucknall

Harry Bucknall (born 1965) is a British writer best known for books In the Dolphin's Wake and Like a Tramp Like a Pilgrim.

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Harry Cole (journalist)

Harry Cole (born c. 1985) is a British journalist working for The Sun.

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Harry Diamond (photographer)

Harry Diamond (25 August 1924 – 3 December 2009) was a photographer known for his photographs of artists, jazz musicians and of the East End of London.

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Harry Eyres

Harry Eyres (born 1958 in London, England) is a journalist, writer and poet.

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Harry Hammond

Harry Hammond (1932 – 16 August 2002) was a British street evangelist who became the subject of a UK-wide public debate after his preaching led to his arrest for a public order offence.

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Harry Quilter

Harry Quilter (24 January 1851 in London – 10 July 1907 in London), was an English art critic, writer and artist.

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Harry Stirling Crawfurd Everard

Harry Stirling Crawfurd Everard (1848–1909) was an English writer on golf.

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Hattie Jacques

Hattie Jacques (born Josephine Edwina Jaques; 7 February 1922 – 6 October 1980) was an English comedy actress of stage, radio and screen.

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Haus Vaterland

Haus Vaterland (Fatherland House) was a pleasure palace on the southwest side of Potsdamer Platz in central Berlin.

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Have I Got News for You

Have I Got News for You is a British television panel show produced by Hat Trick Productions for the BBC.

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Hazel Blears

Hazel Anne Blears (born 14 May 1956) is a British Labour Party politician, who was the Member of Parliament (MP) for Salford and Eccles from 2010 to 2015, when she stood down.

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Heaven and Earth (book)

Heaven and Earth: Global Warming – The Missing Science is a popular science book published in 2009 and written by Australian geologist, professor of mining geology at Adelaide University, and mining company director Ian Plimer.

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Heffalump

A Heffalump is a type of elephant-like character in the Winnie the Pooh stories by A. A. Milne.

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Heidi Allen

Heidi Allen (born 18 January 1975) is a British Conservative Party politician.

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Helen Hinsdale Rich

Helen Hinsdale Rich (June 18, 1827 - September 4, 1915), known as "The Poet of the Adirondacks", was a 19th-century American writer.

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Helen Zimmern

Helen Zimmern (25 March 1846 – 11 January 1934) was naturalised British writer and translator born in Germany.

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Henrietta Keddie

Henrietta Keddie (1827–1914) was a prolific Scottish novelist who wrote under the pseudonym Sarah Tytler.

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Henry Andrade Harben

Henry Andrade Harben FSA (12 August 1849 - 18 August 1910) was a barrister, insurance company director, politician, and historian of London.

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Henry Cartwright

Henry Cartwright (1 September 1814 – 26 July 1890) was a British Conservative Party politician.

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Henry Daly

General Sir Henry Dermot Daly (25 October 1823 – 21 July 1895) was a senior British Indian Army officer, colonial administrator, Liberal Unionist politician and founder of Daly College.

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Henry Dircks

Henry Dircks FRSE FCS (26 August 1806 – 17 September 1873) was an English engineer who is considered to have been the main designer of the projection technique known as Pepper's ghost in 1858.

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Henry Fairlie

Henry Jones Fairlie (13 January 1924 London, England – 25 February 1990 Washington, D.C.) was a British political journalist and social critic.

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Henry Goldfinch

Lt-General Sir Henry Goldfinch KCB (1781-21 November 1854) was an officer in the Royal Engineers who served during the Peninsular War of 1807 to 1814, ending his career as one of the colonels commandant of the Corps of Royal Engineers.

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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 Keswick (businessman)

Sir Henry Neville Lindley Keswick (born 29 September 1938) is a British businessman.

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Henry Southern (journalist)

Henry Southern (1799–1853) was an English journalist and diplomat, best known as the founder of the Retrospective Review.

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Henry Strachey (artist)

Henry Strachey (1863–1940) was an English painter, art critic and writer.

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Henry Watson Fowler

Henry Watson Fowler (10 March 1858 – 26 December 1933) was an English schoolmaster, lexicographer and commentator on the usage of the English language.

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Henry William Massingham

Henry William Massingham (25 May 1860 - 27 August 1924) was an English journalist, editor of The Nation from 1907 to 1923.

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Hermione Eyre

Hermione Eyre (born 1980) is a British journalist, novelist, and former child actor.

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Hermione, Countess of Ranfurly

Hermione, Countess of Ranfurly, OBE, (née Llewellyn) (13 November 1913 – 11 February 2001), was the British author of To War With Whitaker: The Wartime Diaries of the Countess of Ranfurly, 1939–1945''.

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Hilary Mantel

Dame Hilary Mary Mantel, (née Thompson; born 6 July 1952) is an English writer whose work includes personal memoirs, short stories, and historical fiction.

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Hilda Matheson

Hilda Matheson, OBE (June 7, 1888 - October 30, 1940) was a pioneering radio talks producer at the BBC and served as the first Director of Talks.

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Hillsborough disaster

The Hillsborough disaster was a human crush at Hillsborough football stadium in Sheffield, England on 15 April 1989, during the 1988–89 FA Cup semi-final game between Liverpool and Nottingham Forest.

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History of American newspapers

The history of American newspapers begins in the early 18th century with the publication of the first colonial newspapers.

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History of Durham University

The history of Durham University spans over 180 years since it was founded by Act of Parliament.

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History of the Ba'ath Party

This article details the history of the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party from its founding in 1947 to its dissolution in the 1960s.

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History of the National Health Service (England)

The National Health Service in England was created by the National Health Service Act 1946.

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Hitch-22

Hitch-22: A Memoir is a memoir written by author and journalist Christopher Hitchens.

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HM Prison Pentonville

HM Prison Pentonville (informally "The Ville") is an English Category B men's prison, operated by Her Majesty's Prison Service.

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Ho Yi

Ho Yi also known as Ho Yi Wong (黃浩義) (pinyin Huáng Hào Yì; born 1956) is a Chinese actor, director, playwright and producer of Hong Kong origin.

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Holland Park School

Holland Park School is a coeducational secondary school and sixth form in Holland Park, London, England.

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Holy Tango of Literature

Holy Tango of Literature is a 2004 anthology of absurdist poetry and drama in the style of various poets and playwrights, written by Francis Heaney with illustrations by Richard Thompson.

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Homage to Catalonia

Homage to Catalonia is George Orwell's personal account of his experiences and observations in the Spanish Civil War.

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Home counties

The home counties are the counties of England that surround London (although several of them do not border it).

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Home Front (BBC radio series)

Home Front is a British radio drama, broadcast on BBC Radio 4 since 4 August 2014.

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Horatio Clare

Horatio Clare (born 1973) is a Welsh-British author.

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Horrible Histories (2009 TV series)

Horrible Histories is a British sketch comedy television series, part of the children's history books of the same name.

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Horse Outside

"Horse Outside" is a song by Irish comedy group The Rubberbandits.

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Hot Summer Night (play)

Hot Summer Night is a play by Ted Willis first produced in 1958.

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How to Be a Conservative

How to Be a Conservative is a 2014 book by the English philosopher Roger Scruton, in which the author outlines the conservative ideology, its opposition to materialism, and argues how it can be applied to crucial contemporary issues.

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How to Clone a Mammoth

How to Clone a Mammoth: The Science of De-Extinction is a 2015 non-fiction book by biologist Beth Shapiro and published by Princeton University Press.

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How to Eat

How to Eat is a 1998 book of English cuisine by the celebrity cook Nigella Lawson.

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How to Lose Friends & Alienate People (film)

How to Lose Friends & Alienate People is a 2008 British comedy film based upon Toby Young's 2001 memoir How to Lose Friends & Alienate People.

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Howard Staunton

Howard Staunton (1810 – 22 June 1874) was an English chess master who is generally regarded as having been the world's strongest player from 1843 to 1851, largely as a result of his 1843 victory over Pierre Charles Fournier de Saint-Amant.

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Hugh Dowding

Air Chief Marshal Hugh Caswall Tremenheere Dowding, 1st Baron Dowding, (24 April 1882 – 15 February 1970) was an officer in the Royal Air Force.

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Hugh Gilbert

Hugh Gilbert OSB (born 15 March 1952) is an English Benedictine monk who currently serves as the Catholic Bishop of Aberdeen, Scotland.

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Hugh Kearney

Hugh Francis Kearney (22 January 1924 – 1 October 2017) was a British historian, and Amundson Professor Emeritus of the University of Pittsburgh.

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Hugh Massingberd

Hugh John Massingberd (30 December 1946 – 25 December 2007), originally Hugh John Montgomery and known from 1963 to 1992 as Hugh Montgomery-Massingberd, was an English journalist and genealogist.

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Hugh Trevor-Roper

Hugh Redwald Trevor-Roper, Baron Dacre of Glanton, (15 January 1914 – 26 January 2003), was a British historian of early modern Britain and Nazi Germany.

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Hugo Rifkind

Hugo James Rifkind (born 30 March 1977) is a British journalist who is a columnist for The Times.

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Hugo Williams

Hugo Williams born Hugh Anthony Mordaunt Vyner Williams is a British poet, journalist and travel writer.

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Humphry Sandwith

Humphry Sandwith (1822–1881) (Humphrey Sandwith IV) was an English army physician, known also as a writer and activist.

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Hunger (memoir)

Hunger: A Memoir of (My) Body is a 2017 memoir by Roxane Gay.

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Hyatt Regency London – The Churchill

The Hyatt Regency London – The Churchill is a five star hotel located on Portman Square, north of Marble Arch in central London, England.

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Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner

Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner (31 March 1858 – 25 August 1935) was a British peace activist, author, atheist and freethinker, and the daughter of Charles Bradlaugh.

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HyperNormalisation

HyperNormalisation is a 2016 BBC documentary by British filmmaker Adam Curtis.

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Iain Dale

Iain Campbell Dale (born 15 July 1962) is an English political commentator, blogger, publisher, broadcaster and former Conservative candidate.

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Iain Hamilton (journalist)

Ian Hamilton is a British journalist, author and poet.

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Iain Macleod

Iain Norman Macleod (11 November 1913 – 20 July 1970) was a British Conservative Party politician and government minister.

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Iain Overton

Iain Overton (born 3 August 1973) is the author of Gun Baby Gun: a bloody journey into the world of the gun.

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Ian Cobain

Ian Cobain (born 1960) is a British journalist, best known for his investigation into torture perpetrated by agents of the United Kingdom government, and for his reporting on the culture of secrecy surrounding the British state, past and present.

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Ian Dunlop

Ian Dunlop (born 1940) is a writer and former art critic for the Evening Standard.

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Ian Fleming Publications

Ian Fleming Publications is the production company formerly known as both Glidrose Productions Limited and Glidrose Publications Limited, named after its founders John Gliddon and Norman Rose.

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Ian Gilmour, Baron Gilmour of Craigmillar

Ian Hedworth John Little Gilmour, Baron Gilmour of Craigmillar, (8 July 1926 – 21 September 2007) was a Conservative politician in the United Kingdom.

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Ian Marber

Ian Marber, born 1963, is a nutrition therapist, well-known author and one of the founders of The Food Doctor, developing the brand from its inception in 1999 until his departure in December 2011.

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Ian McIntyre

Ian McIntyre (9 December 1931 – 19 April 2014) was a British BBC Radio producer, journalist, broadcaster and author.

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Ian Paisley

Ian Richard Kyle Paisley, Baron Bannside, (6 April 1926 – 12 September 2014), was a loyalist politician and Protestant religious leader from Northern Ireland.

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Ian Thomson (writer)

Ian Thomson (born 1961) is an English author, best known for his biography Primo Levi (2002), and reportage, The Dead Yard: Tales of Modern Jamaica (2009).

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Ibn Warraq

Ibn Warraq is the pen name of an anonymous author critical of Islam.

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IdeasTap

IdeasTap was a UK charitable organisation established to aid people in the creative industry at the start of their careers.

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Identity Cards Act 2006

The Identity Cards Act 2006 (c 15) was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that has since been repealed.

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In Flanders Fields

"In Flanders Fields" is a war poem in the form of a rondeau, written during the First World War by Canadian physician Lieutenant-Colonel John McCrae.

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In Praise of Limestone

"In Praise of Limestone" is a poem written by W. H. Auden in Italy in May 1948.

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Ina Skriver

Ina Skriver (born 30 November 1949) is a Danish-born actress and model who worked mostly in British films and television.

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Incel

Incels (a portmanteau of "involuntary celibates") are self-identifying members of an online subculture who define themselves as unable to find a romantic or sexual partner despite desiring one, a state they describe as inceldom.

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Independent Jewish Voices (Canada)

Independent Jewish Voices (Canada) (IJV) is an organization that describes itself as representing Canadian Jews who have a strong commitment to social justice and universal human rights.

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India: The Rise of an Asian Giant

India: The Rise of an Asian Giant is a 2008 book by Dietmar Rothermund which describes the contemporary state of the major influences on the economy of India.

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India–Pakistan relations

Relations between India and Pakistan have been complex and largely hostile due to a number of historical and political events.

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Indra's net

Indra's net (also called Indra's jewels or Indra's pearls, Sanskrit Indrajāla) is a metaphor used to illustrate the concepts of Śūnyatā (emptiness), pratītyasamutpāda (dependent origination),.

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Information Research Department

The Information Research Department, founded in 1948 by Christopher Mayhew MP, was a department of the British Foreign Office set up to counter Soviet propaganda and infiltration, particularly amongst the western labour movement.

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Inkle and Yarico

Inkle and Yarico is a comic opera first staged in London, England, in August 1787, with music by Samuel Arnold and a libretto by George Colman the Younger.

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Insects in literature

Insects have appeared in literature from classical times to the present day, an aspect of their role in culture more generally.

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Inspector Ghote's First Case

Inspector Ghote's First Case is a crime novel by H. R. F. Keating.

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Inspirations for James Bond

A number of real-life inspirations have been suggested for James Bond, the fictional character created in 1953 by British author, journalist and Naval Intelligence officer Ian Fleming; Bond appeared in twelve novels and nine short stories by Fleming, as well as a number of continuation novels and twenty-six films, with seven actors playing the role of Bond.

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Institut Le Rosey

Institut Le Rosey, commonly referred to as Le Rosey or simply Rosey, is a boarding school in Rolle, Switzerland.

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Institute for Fiscal Studies

The Institute for Fiscal Studies is an economic research institute based in London, United Kingdom, which specialises in UK taxation and public policy.

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Institute of Public Affairs

The Institute of Public Affairs (IPA) is a conservative public policy think tank.

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Intellectual

An intellectual is a person who engages in critical thinking, research, and reflection about society and proposes solutions for its normative problems.

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International Life Assurance Society

The International Life Assurance Society was a 19th-century British insurance company.

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International Who's Who

The International Who's Who is a Who's Who reference book of notable people worldwide that has been published since 1935.

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Iran nuclear deal framework

The Iran nuclear deal framework was a preliminary framework agreement reached in 2015 between the Islamic Republic of Iran and a group of world powers: the P5+1 (the permanent members of the United Nations Security Council—the United States, the United Kingdom, Russia, France, and China—plus Germany) and the European Union.

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Irene Byers

Irene Byers, born in 1906 (?), was an English novelist, poet and children's writer who wrote around forty books mostly published in the 1950s and 1960s.

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Iris Barry

Iris Barry (1895 – 1969) was a film critic and curator.

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Iris Birtwistle

Iris Mary Birtwistle (29 May 1918 – 22 June 2006; also known as Lilla and IM Birtwistle) was an English lyric poet and gallery owner who nurtured young artists despite eventually losing her sight.

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Iris tingitana

Iris tingitana (also commonly known as the Morocco iris, or Tangerian Iris, or Tangiers Iris) is a species in the genus Iris in the subgenus of ''Xiphium''.

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Irish Council Bill

The Irish Council Bill (or Irish Councils Bill; long title A Bill to provide for the Establishment and functions of an Administrative Council in Ireland and for other purposes connected therewith) was a bill introduced and withdrawn from the UK Parliament in 1907 by the Campbell-Bannerman administration.

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Irish Metropolitan Conservative Society

The Irish Metropolitan Conservative Society was an Irish political movement based in Dublin which was linked to the Irish Conservative Party, the main political party in Ireland until 1859.

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Iron Foot Jack

Jack Rudolph Neave or Neaves (born c. 1886; died 1959), usually known as "Iron Foot Jack", was an Australian nightclub owner who came to prominence in London during the notorious Caravan Club trial of 1934.

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Isabel Hardman

Isabel Hardman (born May 1986) is a political journalist and the assistant editor of The Spectator.

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Isabel Oakeshott

Isabel Euphemia Oakeshott (born 12 June 1974) is a British political journalist, and broadcaster.

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Isabel Quigly

Isabel Madeleine Quigly (born 17 September 1926) is a writer, translator and film critic.

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Isabella Valancy Crawford

Isabella Valancy Crawford (25 December 1846 – 12 February 1887) was an Irish-born Canadian writer and poet.

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Islam: The Untold Story

Islam: The Untold Story is a documentary film written and presented by the award-winning English novelist and historian Tom Holland.

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Islamic Human Rights Commission

The Islamic Human Rights Commission (IHRC) is a non-profit organisation based in London.

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Islamofascism

Islamic fascism (first described in 1933), also known since 1990 as Islamofascism, is a term drawing an analogy between the ideological characteristics of specific Islamist movements and a broad range of European fascist movements of the early 20th century, neofascist movements, or totalitarianism.

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Israel, Palestine, and the United Nations

Issues relating to the State of Israel, the State of Palestine and other aspects of the Arab–Israeli conflict occupy repeated annual debate times, resolutions and resources at the United Nations.

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J. D. Beresford

John Davys Beresford (17 March 1873 – 2 February 1947) was an English writer, now remembered for his early science fiction and some short stories in the horror story and ghost story genres.

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J. P. W. Mallalieu

Sir Joseph Percival William Mallalieu (18 June 1908 – 13 March 1980), known after his knighthood as Sir William Mallalieu, was a British Labour Party politician, journalist and author.

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J.Lo by Jennifer Lopez

J.Lo by Jennifer Lopez is an American lifestyle brand founded by Jennifer Lopez in 2001.

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Jack Buckby

Jack Buckby (born 1993) is a British politician, author, political activist and researcher.

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Jack Holland (writer)

Jack Holland (4 June 1947 – 14 May 2004) was an Irish journalist, novelist, and poet who built a reputation chronicling "The Troubles" in his native Northern Ireland.

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Jacki Randall

Jacki Randall is an American artist, tattoo artist, musician and writer currently based in Baltimore.

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Jacob Rees-Mogg

Jacob William Rees-Mogg (born 24 May 1969) is a British politician who has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for North East Somerset since 2010.

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Jacyn Heavens

Jacyn Heavens (born June 7, 1983) is the owner, founder and CEO of Epos Now, a global electronic point of sale company with offices in both the UK and the United States, and a media commentator for retail, hospitality and tech industry trends.

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Jad Adams

Jad Adams (born 27 November 1954) is a British writer and television producer.

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Jailhouse Rock (film)

Jailhouse Rock is a 1957 American musical drama film directed by Richard Thorpe and starring Elvis Presley, Judy Tyler, and Mickey Shaughnessy.

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James Bloodworth (journalist)

James Bloodworth is an English journalist and writer.

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James Bolivar Manson

James Bolivar Manson (26 June 1879 in London – 3 July 1945 in London), Tate collection online, material from Mary Chamot, Dennis Farr and Martin Butlin, The Modern British Paintings, Drawings and Sculpture, London 1964, II.

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James Bond uncollected and other miscellaneous short stories

In the 1950s pierre died and 1960s, Ian Fleming, creator of the fictional secret agent, James Bond, wrote a number of short stories featuring his creation that appeared in the collections For Your Eyes Only and Octopussy and The Living Daylights.

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James Brooke

Sir James Brooke, Rajah of Sarawak, KCB (29 April 1803 – 11 June 1868), was a British soldier and adventurer who founded the Kingdom of Sarawak in Borneo.

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James Campbell (journalist)

James Campbell is the national politics editor at the Herald Sun newspaper in Melbourne and a regular commentator on Sky News Australia.

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James Cleverly

James Spencer Cleverly (born 4 September 1969) is a British Conservative politician and Army Reserve officer.

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James Delingpole

James Mark Court Delingpole (born 6 August 1965) is a writer, journalist, and columnist who has written for a number of publications, including the Daily Mail, Daily Express, The Times, The Daily Telegraph, and The Spectator.

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James Dutton (Royal Marines officer)

Lieutenant General Sir James Benjamin "Jim" Dutton, KCB, CBE, KStJ, ADC (born 21 February 1954) was the Governor of Gibraltar and is a retired Royal Marines officer.

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James Evans (historian)

James Richard Evans (born 17 December 1975) is an English historian, author and television producer.

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James Forsyth (journalist)

James Forsyth (born 1981) is a British political journalist and political editor of The Spectator magazine.

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James Hain Friswell

James Hain Friswell (8 May 1825 – 12 March 1878) was an English essayist and novelist.

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James Heappey

James Stephen Heappey (born 30 January 1981) is a British Conservative Party politician.

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James Hutton

James Hutton (3 June 1726 – 26 March 1797) was a Scottish geologist, physician, chemical manufacturer, naturalist, and experimental agriculturalist.

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James Kirchick

James "Jamie" Kirchick (born 1983) is an American reporter, foreign correspondent, author, and columnist.

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James Le Fanu

James Le Fanu (born 1950) is a British retired General Practitioner, journalist and author of several books.

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James Michie

James Michie (1927–2007) was a British poet and translator of Latin poets, including The Odes of Horace, The Poems of Catullus, and The Epigrams of Martial.

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James O'Brien (broadcaster)

James Edward O'Brien (born 13 January 1972) is a British journalist, television presenter, radio presenter, and podcaster.

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James Pope-Hennessy

James Pope Hennessy CVO (20 November 1916 – 25 January 1974) was a British biographer and travel writer.

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James Stourton

James Alastair Stourton, (born 3 July 1956 in York, England), is a British art historian and a former Chairman of Sotheby’s UK.

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James Strachey

James Beaumont Strachey (26 September 1887, London25 April 1967, High Wycombe) was a British psychoanalyst, and, with his wife Alix, a translator of Sigmund Freud into English.

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James Thomson (minister)

James Thomson (1768–1855) was a Scottish minister and editor of the Encyclopædia Britannica.

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Jamie Bartlett (journalist)

Jamie Bartlett is an author and tech blogger for The Spectator and Director of the Centre for the Analysis of Social Media for Demos in conjunction with The University of Sussex.

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Jane Joseph

Jane Marian Joseph (31 May 1894 – 9 March 1929) was an English composer, arranger and music teacher.

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Jane Mulvagh

Jane Mulvagh is an Irish-born journalist and social historian, specialising in British history.

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Jane Ridley

Jane Ridley (born 15 May 1953) is an English historian, biographer, author and broadcaster, and Professor of Modern History at the University of Buckingham.

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Janet Baker

Dame Janet Abbott Baker (born 21 August 1933) is an English mezzo-soprano best known as an opera, concert, and lieder singer.

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Janet Daley

Janet Daley (born 21 March 1944) is a conservative American-born journalist living and working in Britain, who is currently a columnist for The Sunday Telegraph.

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Janet Ross

Janet Ann Ross (1842–1927) was an English historian, biographer, and Tuscan cookbook author.

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Jani Allan

Jani Allan (born 11 September 1952) is a South African journalist, columnist, writer and broadcaster.

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Jankers

In the British Armed Services, jankers or Restrictions of Privileges is an official punishment for a minor breach of discipline, as opposed to the more severe punishment of "detention" which would be given for a man committing a more serious or criminal offence.

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January 1923

The following events occurred in January 1923.

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Jap

Jap is an English abbreviation of the word "Japanese".

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Jascha Spivakovsky

Jascha Spivakovsky (18 August 1896 – 23 March 1970) was a Ukrainian-Australian piano virtuoso of the 20th century.

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Jason Cowley

Jason Cowley is an English journalist, magazine editor and writer.

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Je suis Charlie

"Je suis Charlie" is a slogan and logo created by French art director Joachim Roncin and adopted by supporters of freedom of speech and freedom of the press after the 7 January 2015 shooting in which twelve people were killed at the offices of the French satirical weekly newspaper Charlie Hebdo.

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Jean Bolikango

Jean Bolikango or Bolikango Akpolokaka Gbukulu Nzete Nzube (4 February 1909 – 17 February 1982) was a Congolese educator, writer, and conservative politician.

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Jean-Michel Defaye

Jean-Michel Defaye (born 18 September 1932) is a French pianist, composer, arranger and conductor known for his collaboration with French poet and singer-songwriter Léo Ferré.

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Jeddah massacre of 1858

On June 15, 1858, 21 Christian residents of Jeddah, then an Ottoman town of 5,000 inhabitants, predominantly Muslims, were massacred, including the French consul "Mr.

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Jeffery Day

Flight Commander Miles Jeffery Game Day, (1 December 1896 – 27 February 1918) was a World War I flying ace credited with five aerial victories, and also a war poet.

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Jeffrey Bernard

Jeffrey Bernard (27 May 1932 – 4 September 1997) was a British journalist, best known for his weekly column "Low Life" in The Spectator magazine, and also notorious for a feckless and chaotic career and life of alcohol abuse.

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Jeffrey Bernard Is Unwell

Jeffrey Bernard Is Unwell is a play by Keith Waterhouse about real-life journalist Jeffrey Bernard.

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Jenni Russell

Jenni Russell is a British columnist and broadcaster.

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Jennifer Caron Hall

Jennifer Caron Hall (born 21 September 1958; also known as Jenny Wilhide) is an English actress, singer-songwriter, artist and journalist.

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Jennifer Marohasy

Jennifer Marohasy (born 1963) is an Australian biologist, columnist and blogger.

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Jennifer Paterson

Jennifer Mary Paterson (3 April 1928 – 10 August 1999) was a British celebrity chef, actress and television personality who appeared on the television programme Two Fat Ladies (1996-1999) with Clarissa Dickson Wright.

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Jenny from the Block

"Jenny from the Block" is a song recorded by American singer Jennifer Lopez, which features American rappers Jadakiss and Styles P; both members of The LOX.

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Jenny Taylor

Jenny Taylor (born 22 October 1955) is a cultural analyst and journalist and founder of Lapido Media, a consultancy specialising in religious literacy in world affairs.

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Jeremy Catto

Dr Robert Jeremy Adam Inch Catto (born 1939) was, until 2006, the Rhodes Fellow and Tutor in Modern History, Oriel College, Oxford, where he was also Senior Dean.

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Jeremy Corbyn

Jeremy Bernard Corbyn (born 26 May 1949).

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Jeremy Thorpe

John Jeremy Thorpe (29 April 1929 – 4 December 2014) was a British politician who served as Member of Parliament for North Devon from 1959 to 1979, and as leader of the Liberal Party between 1967 and 1976.

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Jesse Norman

Alexander Jesse Norman (born 23 June 1962) is a British politician who was first elected as the Conservative Member of Parliament for Hereford and South Herefordshire at the 2010 general election.

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Jessie Burton

Jessica Kathryn Burton (born 17 August 1982)Inside back cover of 2015 Picador UK paperback edition of The Miniaturist is an English author and actress.

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Jihadi John

Mohammed Emwazi (born Muhammad Jassim Abdulkarim Olayan al-Dhafiri; محمد جاسم عبد الكريم عليان الظفيري; 17 August 1988 – 12 November 2015) was a British Arab believed to be the person seen in several videos produced by the Islamic extremist group ISIL showing the beheadings of a number of captives in 2014 and 2015.

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Jimmy Savile

Sir James Wilson Vincent Savile (31 October 1926 – 29 October 2011) was an English DJ, television and radio personality, dance hall manager, and charity fundraiser.

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Jo-Anne Nadler

Jo-Anne Nadler is a British journalist, writer, political commentator and Conservative Party politician.

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Joan Collins

Dame Joan Henrietta Collins, (born 23 May 1933) is an English actress, author and columnist.

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Joan of Arc (1935 film)

Joan of Arc (German:Das Mädchen Johanna) is a 1935 German historical film directed by Gustav Ucicky and starring Angela Salloker, Gustaf Gründgens and Heinrich George.

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Joanna Coles

Joanna Louise Coles, OBE (born 20 April 1962) is the first person to hold the position of Chief Content Officer for Hearst Magazines.

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Joanna Kavenna

Joanna Kavenna is a British novelist, essayist and travel writer.

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Joanna Moorhead

Joanna Moorhead is a British journalist who writes for The Guardian, The Observer and many other UK newspapers and magazines.

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Joaquim Joseph A. Campos

Joachim Joseph A. Campos (1893-1945), also known as J.J.A. Campos, was an author, editor and took an active interest in history.

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Joash Woodrow

Joash Woodrow (April 6, 1927 – February 15, 2006) was a reclusive English artist.

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Johann Hari

Johann Eduard Hari (born 21 January 1979) is a Swiss-British writer and journalist.

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John Black Atkins

John Black Atkins (5 November 1871 – 1954) was a British journalist.

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John Bourn

Sir John Bryant Bourn KCB (born 21 February 1934) is a former Comptroller and Auditor General and therefore a former head of the National Audit Office.

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John Bradburne

John Randal Bradburne, O.F.S. (14 June 1921 in Skirwith, Cumbria, England, UK – 5 September 1979 near Mutoko, Mashonaland South, Rhodesia – now Mashonaland East, Zimbabwe), was a lay member of the Order of St Francis, a poet, warden of the Mutemwa leper colony at Mutoko.

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John Buchan

John Buchan, 1st Baron Tweedsmuir, (26 August 1875 – 11 February 1940) was a Scottish novelist, historian, and Unionist politician who served as Governor General of Canada, the 15th since Canadian Confederation.

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John Casey (academic)

John Casey (born 1939) is a British academic and a writer for The Daily Telegraph.

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John Chancellor (colonial administrator)

Lieutenant Colonel Sir John Robert Chancellor (20 October 1870 – 31 July 1952) was a British soldier and colonial official.

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John Cleese

John Marwood Cleese (born 27 October 1939) is an English actor, voice actor, comedian, screenwriter, and producer.

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John Crawfurd

John Crawfurd (13 August 1783 – 11 May 1868) was a Scottish physician, colonial administrator and diplomat, and author.

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John D. Hamaker

John D. Hamaker (1914–1994), was an American mechanical engineer, ecologist, agronomist and science writer in the fields of soil regeneration, rock dusting, mineral cycles, climate cycles and glaciology.

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John Davenport (critic)

John Lancelot Agard Bramhall Davenport (10 May 1908 – 27 June 1966) was an English critic and book reviewer who wrote for, amongst other publications, The Observer and The Spectator.

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John Fraser (journalist)

John Anderson Fraser, (born June 5, 1944), is a Canadian journalist, writer and academic.

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John Gielgud

Sir Arthur John Gielgud (14 April 1904 – 21 May 2000) was an English actor and theatre director whose career spanned eight decades.

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John Glashan

John Glashan (born John McGlashan, 24 December 1927 – 15 June 1999Martin Plimmer, "", The Independent, 22 July 1999. Accessed 20 August 2016.) was a Scottish cartoonist, illustrator and playwright.

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John Gray (philosopher)

John Nicholas Gray (born 17 April 1948) is an English political philosopher with interests in analytic philosophy and the history of ideas.

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John Gribbin

John R. Gribbin (born 19 March 1946) is a British science writer, an astrophysicist, and a visiting fellow in astronomy at the University of Sussex.

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John Grigg, 2nd Baron Altrincham

John Edward Poynder Grigg (15 April 1924 – 31 December 2001) was a British writer, historian and politician.

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John Gross

John Gross FRSL (12 March 1935 – 10 January 2011) was an eminent English man of letters.

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John Home Home

Lieutenant-General John Home Home was an officer of the British Army.

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John Hooper (journalist)

John Edward Francis Hooper (born 17 July 1950, Westminster, London, England) is a British journalist, author and broadcaster.

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John Ingram Lockhart (writer)

John Ingram Lockhart (1812–1889) was an English writer and translator.

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John Inverdale

John Inverdale (born 27 September 1957) is an English broadcaster who works for both the BBC and ITV.

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John J. Studzinski

John Joseph Paul Studzinski, (born March 19, 1956) is an American-born British investment banker and philanthropist.

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John Jay Mortimer

John Jay Mortimer (1935 – 2013) was an American financier and member of the prominent Mortimer family of New York.

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John King, Baron King of Wartnaby

John Leonard King, Baron King of Wartnaby (29 August 1917 – 12 July 2005) was a British businessman, who was noted for leading British Airways from an inefficient, nationalised company to one of the most successful airlines of recent times.

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John Lang (writer)

John Lang (19 December 1816 – 20 August 1864) was an Australian lawyer and was Australia's first native born novelist.

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John Langton Sanford

John Langton Sanford (1824–1877) was an English historical writer.

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John Laughland

John Laughland (born 6 September 1963) is a British eurosceptic conservative academic and author who writes on international affairs and political philosophy.

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John Lennox

John Carson Lennox (born 7 November 1943) is a Northern Irish mathematician specialising in group theory, a philosopher of science and a Christian apologist.

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John Lewis-Stempel

John Lewis-Stempel (born 1967) is an English farmer, writer, and Sunday Times Top 5 best selling author.

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John Michell (writer)

John Frederick Carden Michell (9 February 1933 – 24 April 2009) was an English author and esotericist who was a prominent figure in the development of the Earth mysteries movement.

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John Morgan (British journalist)

John Morgan (1929–1988) was a Welsh journalist and broadcaster.

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John Mulcaster Carrick

John Mulcaster Carrick (1833 – 22 September 1896) was a British painter, etcher and illustrator.

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John O'Sullivan (columnist)

John O'Sullivan, CBE (born 25 April 1942) is a British conservative political commentator and journalist.

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John Osborne

John James Osborne (Fulham, London, 12 December 1929 – 24 December 1994) was an English playwright, screenwriter and actor, known for his excoriating prose and intense critical stance towards established social and political norms.

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John Oxx

John M. Oxx (born 14 July 1950) is a leading Irish trainer of thoroughbred racehorses.

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John Pilger

John Richard Pilger (born 9 October 1939) is an Australian journalist and BAFTA award-winning documentary film maker.

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John R. Bradley

John R. Bradley (Born 6 June 1970Contemporary Authors database) is a British author and journalist who has written on Middle East issues for numerous publications, including The Economist, The Forward, Newsweek, The New Republic, The Daily Telegraph, Prospect and The Independent.

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John Spencer Login

Sir John Spencer Login (9 November 1809 – 18 October 1863) was a Scottish surgeon in British India, best remembered as the guardian of Maharajah Duleep Singh and the Koh-i-Noor diamond following the annexation of Punjab and Last Treaty of Lahore.

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John Strachey (journalist)

John St.

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John Strachey (politician)

Evelyn John St Loe Strachey (21 October 1901 – 15 July 1963) was a British Labour politician and writer.

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John Thackara

John Thackara (born 6 August 1951, Newcastle upon Tyne) is a British-born writer, advisor and public speaker.

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John Thomas (bishop of Salisbury)

John Thomas (1691–1766) was an English Bishop of Lincoln and Bishop of Salisbury.

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John Wade (author)

John Wade (1788–1875), author, was an industrious writer connected with the press throughout his career.

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John Whittingdale

John Flasby Lawrance Whittingdale, (born 16 October 1959) is a British Conservative Party politician and former UK Government minister.

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John Woodcock (politician)

John Zak Woodcock (born 14 October 1978) is a British Labour and Co-operative politician who has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for Barrow and Furness since 2010.

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Joi Bangla

Joi Bangla is an EP by Indian sitar virtuoso Ravi Shankar, issued in August 1971 on Apple Records.

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Jolly Fellows

Jolly Fellows (Весёлые ребята Vesyolye rebyata), also translated as Happy-Go-Lucky Guys, Moscow Laughs and Jazz Comedy, is a 1934 Soviet musical film, directed by Grigori Aleksandrov and starring his wife Lyubov Orlova, a gifted singer and the first recognized star of Soviet cinema.

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Jonas Kaufmann

Jonas Kaufmann (born 10 July 1969) is a German operatic tenor.

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Jonathan Bate

Sir Andrew Jonathan Bate, CBE, FBA, FRSL (born 26 June 1958), is a British academic, biographer, critic, broadcaster, novelist and scholar.

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Jonathan Cecil

Jonathan Hugh Gascoyne-Cecil (22 February 1939 – 22 September 2011), more commonly known as Jonathan Cecil, was an English theatre, film and television actor.

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Jonathan Davis (journalist)

Jonathan Davis (born 17 February 1954) is a British author, editor and journalist specialising in finance.

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Jonathan King

Jonathan King (born Kenneth George King, 6 December 1944) is an English singer-songwriter, record producer, music entrepreneur, and former television and radio presenter.

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Jonathan Meades

Jonathan Turner Meades (born 21 January 1947) is an English writer and film-maker, primarily on the subjects of place, culture, architecture and food.

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Jonathan Pugh

Jonathan Pugh (born 1962) is an English cartoonist who has contributed to many United Kingdom national newspapers and magazines.

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Jonathan Ruffer

Jonathan Ruffer DL (born 17 August 1951) is a British City investor, art collector and philanthropist.

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Jonathan Sumption, Lord Sumption

Jonathan Philip Chadwick Sumption, Lord Sumption (born 9 December 1948), is a British judge, author and medieval historian.

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Jonathan Tisdall

Jonathan D. Tisdall (born August 26, 1958 in Buffalo, New York) is a grandmaster of chess (title awarded 1993) and works as a freelance journalist.

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Jordan Peterson

Jordan Bernt Peterson (born June 12, 1962) is a Canadian clinical psychologist and a professor of psychology at the University of Toronto.

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Joseph Addison

Joseph Addison (1 May 1672 – 17 June 1719) was an English essayist, poet, playwright, and politician.

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Joseph Arch

Joseph Arch (10 November 1826 – 12 February 1919) was an English politician, born in Barford, Warwickshire who played a key role in unionising agricultural workers and in championing their welfare.

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Joseph Haythorne Reed

Joseph Haythorne Reed (1828 – 6 April 1858) was a British Whig politician.

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Joseph Jorkens

Joseph Jorkens, usually referred to simply as Jorkens, is the lead character in over 150 short stories written by the Irish author Lord Dunsany between 1925 and 1957.

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Joseph Lee (poet)

Joseph Johnston Lee (1876–1949) was a Scottish journalist, artist and poet, who chronicled life in the trenches and as a prisoner of war during World War I. He is also remembered for his dispute with then poet laureate Robert Bridges over the literary value of Robert Burns' work.

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Joseph Thackwell

Sir Joseph Thackwell (1 February 1781 – 8 April 1859) was a lieutenant general in the British Army.

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Journalists of the Balkan Wars

This page lists the known war correspondents, war photographers, war artists, and war cinematographers who were active during the First and Second Balkan Wars.

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Judith Flanders

Judith Flanders (born 1959) is a historian, journalist and author, who has settled in London, England.

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Julian Assange

Julian Paul Assange (born Hawkins; 3 July 1971) is an Australian computer programmer and the editor of WikiLeaks.

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Julian Brazier

Sir Julian William Hendy Brazier (born 24 July 1953) is a British Conservative Party politician.

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Julian Burnside

Julian William Kennedy Burnside AO QC (born 9 June 1949) is an Australian barrister, human rights and refugee advocate, and author.

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Julian Gloag

Julian Gloag (born July 2 1930) is an English novelist and screenwriter.

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Julie Powell

Julia Anne Foster, known as Julie Powell, (born April 20, 1973) is an American author known for her book Julie & Julia: 365 Days, 524 Recipes, 1 Tiny Apartment Kitchen as well as the film Julie & Julia which was based on her book.

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Juliet, Naked

Juliet, Naked is a novel by the British author Nick Hornby, released on 29 September 2009 by Riverhead Books.

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Julieta (film)

Julieta is a 2016 Spanish film written and directed by Pedro Almodóvar based on three short stories from the book Runaway by Alice Munro.

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July 1965

The following events occurred in July 1965.

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Kajaki Dam

The Kajaki Dam is one of the two major hydroelectric power dams of Helmand province in southern Afghanistan.

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Karachi

Karachi (کراچی; ALA-LC:,; ڪراچي) is the capital of the Pakistani province of Sindh.

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Karl Miller

Karl Fergus Connor Miller FRSL (2 August 1931 – 24 September 2014) was a British literary editor, critic and writer.

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Kate Reardon

Kate Reardon (born 1968 in New York City) is a British journalist and author who was the editor of Tatler magazine from 2011 until resigning in December 2017.

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Kate Royal

Kate Royal (born 1979) is an English lyric soprano.

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Kate Williams (historian)

Kate Williams (born 30 November 1978) is a British author, historian and television presenter.

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Katerina Wilczynski

Katerina Wilczynski (7 July 1894-1978) was a 20th-century painter, print maker and illustrator.

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Kathleen Nott

Kathleen Cecilia Nott FRSL (11 February 1905 – 20 February 1999) was a British poet, novelist, critic, philosopher and editor.

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Katy Brand

Katherine Frances "Katy" Brand (born 13 January 1979) is an English actress, comedian and writer, known for her ITV2 series Katy Brand's Big Ass Show and for Comedy Lab Slap on Channel 4.

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Kay Dick

Kay Dick (29 July 1915 – 19 October 2001) was an English journalist, writer, novelist and autobiographer, who sometimes wrote under the name Edward Lane.

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Keith Coventry

Keith Coventry is a British artist and curator.

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Keith Dewhurst

Keith Dewhurst (born 24 December 1931) is an English playwright and film and television scriptwriter.

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Keith Kyle

Keith Kyle (4 August 1925, Sturminster Newton, Dorset – 21 February 2007, London) was a British writer, broadcaster and historian.

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Keith Waithe

Keith Waithe is a Guyana-born musician, composer and teacher who has been based in the United Kingdom since 1977.

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Keith Windschuttle

Keith Windschuttle (born 1942) is an Australian writer, historian, and former ABC board member.

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Kemi Badenoch

Olukemi Olufunto Badenoch (née Adegoke; born January 1980) is a British Conservative politician and Member of Parliament for Saffron Walden.

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Ken Livingstone

Kenneth Robert Livingstone (born 17 June 1945) is an English politician who served as the Leader of the Greater London Council (GLC) from 1981 until the council was abolished in 1986, and as Mayor of London from the creation of the office in 2000 until 2008.

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Ken: The Ups and Downs of Ken Livingstone

Ken: The Ups and Downs of Ken Livingstone is a 2008 biography of Ken Livingstone by British journalist and author Andrew Hosken.

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Kenneth Bigley

Kenneth John "Ken" Bigley (22 April 1942 – 7 October 2004) was a British civil engineer who was kidnapped in the al-Mansour district of Baghdad, Iraq, on 16 September 2004, along with his colleagues Jack Hensley and Eugene Armstrong, both United States citizens.

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Kenneth H. Ashley

Kenneth Herbert Ashley (1887--?) was an English poet, novelist, journalist, and farmer; published Up Hill and Down Dales (poetry), Creighton the Admirable (novel) and Death of a Curate (detective novel); wrote articles for The London Mercury, The Spectator, and The Athenaeum.

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Kenneth Horne

Charles Kenneth Horne, generally known as Kenneth Horne, (27 February 1907 – 14 February 1969) was an English comedian and businessman.

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Kensington Palace Gardens

Kensington Palace Gardens is a street in Kensington, west central London, home to some of the most expensive properties in the world.

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Kevin Hollinrake

Kevin Paul Hollinrake (born 28 September 1963) is a British Conservative politician and former estate agent.

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Kevin Maher (writer)

Kevin Maher (born 1972) is an Irish writer.

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Kevin Woodcock

Kevin Robert Woodcock (2 September 1942, Leicester, England – 2 July 2007, Leicester) was a British cartoonist.

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Kids Company

Keeping Kids Company (in liquidation), formerly Kids Company, is an incorporated and registered charity, founded by Camila Batmanghelidjh in 1996 to provide support to deprived inner city children.

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Kiln Theatre

Kiln Theatre (formerly the Tricycle Theatre) is on Kilburn High Road in Kilburn in the London Borough of Brent, England.

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Kimberly Quinn

Kimberly Quinn (formerly Fortier; née Solomon; born 1961) is an American journalist, commentator and magazine publisher and writer; latterly the publisher of British conservative news magazine The Spectator.

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Kind Hearts and Coronets

Kind Hearts and Coronets is a 1949 British black comedy film.

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King Creole

King Creole is a 1958 American musical drama film directed by Michael Curtiz and starring Elvis Presley, Carolyn Jones, and Walter Matthau.

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Kingcraft

Kingcraft (1867–1887) was a British Thoroughbred racehorse and sire.

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Kingdoms of Elfin

Kingdoms of Elfin is a short story collection by Sylvia Townsend Warner, published by the Viking Press in 1977, a year before her death.

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Kipper Williams

Christopher "Kipper" Williams is a cartoonist who draws for newspapers, magazines, audio visual presentations and greetings cards.

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Kit and Kitty

Kit and Kitty: a story of west Middlesex is a three-volume novel by R. D. Blackmore published in 1890.

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Kitchen Cabinet (TV series)

Kitchen Cabinet is a TV program in Australia on the ABC, hosted by Annabel Crabb.

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Kleptocracy Tour

'' refers to tours of cities where financial flows from kleptocracies are being used to purchase residential property as a means of money-laundering.

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Knowing Me Knowing You with Alan Partridge (TV series)

Knowing Me Knowing You with Alan Partridge (also known as Knowing Me Knowing You) is a BBC Television series of six episodes (beginning 16 September 1994), and a Christmas special Knowing Me Knowing Yule on 29 December 1995.

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Koh-i-Noor: The History of the World's Most Infamous Diamond

Koh-i-Noor: The History of the World's Most Infamous Diamond is a 2017 book on the Koh-i-Noor diamond written by William Dalrymple and Anita Anand.

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Koo Stark

Kathleen Norris Stark (born April 26, 1956), better known as Koo Stark, is an American photographer and actress, known for her relationship with Prince Andrew.

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Ksenija Pavlovic

Ksenija Pavlovic is an American independent journalist, political scientist, educator, political and cultural critic, a published poet and author of the novel Pisma Vetru.

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Kurt Enoch

Kurt Enoch (22 November 1895 – 15 February 1982) was a German-born publisher who co-founded Albatross Books in Germany and Penguin Books Inc. and New American Library in the United States, bringing high-quality paperback fiction and non-fiction to the mass market in those countries.

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Kyllachy

Kyllachy (foaled 25 February 1998) is a British Thoroughbred racehorse and sire.

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La Bandera (film)

La Bandera (released in the United States as Escape from Yesterday) is a 1935 French drama film directed by Julien Duvivier and starring Annabella, Jean Gabin and Robert Le Vigan.

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La Belle Sauvage

La Belle Sauvage is a fantasy novel by Philip Pullman published in 2017, the first volume in a planned trilogy named The Book of Dust.

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La Foce

La Foce is a large estate that lies close to the towns of Montepulciano, Chiusi, and Chianciano Terme in the Southern Tuscan region of Val d'Orcia midway between Florence and Rome.

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Lady Juliet Townsend

Lady Juliet Margaret Townsend, DCVO (née Smith; 9 September 1941 – 29 November 2014) was a British writer and Lord Lieutenant of Northamptonshire, the first woman to hold the position.

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Lady Margaret Sackville

Lady Margaret Sackville (24 December 1881 – 18 April 1963) was an English poet and children’s author.

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Lamarckism

Lamarckism (or Lamarckian inheritance) is the hypothesis that an organism can pass on characteristics that it has acquired through use or disuse during its lifetime to its offspring.

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Lamentation (novel)

Lamentation is a historical mystery novel by British author C. J. Sansom.

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Langholm Capital

Langholm Capital is a London-based private equity firm.

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Larry Taunton

Larry Alex Taunton (born, May 24, 1967) is an American author, columnist, and cultural commentator.

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Laura Cumming

Laura Cumming has been art critic of The Observer newspaper since 1999.

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Laura Kuenssberg

Laura Juliet Kuenssberg (born 1976) is a Scottish journalist.

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Laurence Stern fellowship

The Laurence Stern fellowship is an annual summer internship program for British journalists at the Washington Post.

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Laurens van der Post

Sir Laurens Jan van der Post, CBE (13 December 1906 – 16 December 1996), was a 20th-century Afrikaner author, farmer, war hero, political adviser to British heads of government, close friend of Prince Charles, godfather of Prince William, educator, journalist, humanitarian, philosopher, explorer and conservationist.

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Laurie Lee

Laurence Edward Alan "Laurie" Lee, MBE (26 June 1914 – 13 May 1997) was an English poet, novelist and screenwriter, who was brought up in the small village of Slad in Gloucestershire.

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Law & Order (UK TV series)

Law & Order (often referred to as Law and Order) is a British television crime drama series, comprising four connected plays written by G. F. Newman and directed by Les Blair, that first transmitted on 6 April 1978 on BBC Two.

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Leah McLaren

Leah McLaren (born November 7, 1975) is a Canadian author and newspaper columnist.

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Len Doherty

Len Doherty (1930–1983) was a British miner, journalist and writer.

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Lenore Coffee

Lenore Jackson Coffee (13 July 1896, San Francisco, California – 2 July 1984, Woodland Hills, California) was an American screenwriter, playwright and novelist.

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Leo Gradwell

Joseph Leo Anthony Gradwell DSC (28 July 1899 – 8 November 1969) was a British barrister, a magistrate and a Second World War Royal Navy volunteer, who in July 1942 against orders, led his own RN-adapted trawler HMS Ayrshire and three merchant ships from the disaster of Convoy PQ 17 into Arkhangelsk, Soviet Union.

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Leo McKinstry

Leo McKinstry (born 1962) is a British journalist, historian and author.

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Leofranc Holford-Strevens

Leofranc Holford-Strevens (born 19 May 1946) is an English classical scholar and polymath, an authority on the works of Aulus Gellius, and a former reader for the Oxford University Press.

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Les dragons de Villars

Les dragons de Villars is an opéra-comique in three acts by Aimé Maillart to a libretto by Lockroy and Eugène Cormon.

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Leslie Finer

Leslie Finer (10 December 1922 – 10 March 2010) was a British journalist and author who worked for the BBC, the Financial Times, The Observer, the New Statesman, other British news organisations, Kathimerini and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.

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Lewis K. Bush

Lewis K. Bush (born 1988) is a British photographer, writer, curator and educator.

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Lewis Nkosi

Lewis Nkosi (5 December 1936 – 5 September 2010) was a South African writer, who spent 30 years in exile as a consequence of restrictions placed on him and his writing by the Suppression of Communism Act and the Publications and Entertainment Act passed in the 1950s and 1960s.

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Liam Halligan

Liam Halligan is a British economist, journalist and broadcaster.

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Liberal Democrats (UK)

The Liberal Democrats (often referred to as Lib Dems) are a liberal British political party, formed in 1988 as a merger of the Liberal Party and the Social Democratic Party (SDP), a splinter group from the Labour Party, which had formed the SDP–Liberal Alliance from 1981.

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Liberal elite

Liberal elite (also metropolitan elite in the United Kingdom) is a pejorative term used to describe people who are politically left of centre, whose education had traditionally opened the doors to affluence and power and form a managerial elite.

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Liberation theology

Liberation theology is a synthesis of Christian theology and Marxist socio-economic analyses that emphasizes social concern for the poor and the political liberation for oppressed peoples.

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Licence to Kill

Licence to Kill is a 1989 British spy film, the sixteenth in the ''James Bond'' film series produced by Eon Productions, and the last to star Timothy Dalton in the role of the fictional MI6 agent James Bond.

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Life's Little Ironies

Life's Little Ironies is a collection of tales written by Thomas Hardy, originally published in 1894, and republished with a slightly different collection of stories, for the Uniform Edition in 1927/8.

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Lifestyle guru

Lifestyle gurus (also called lifestyle coaches, lifestyle trainers, lifestyle consultants) advise people how they can make themselves happier through changes in their lifestyle.

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Light poetry

Light poetry, or light verse, is poetry that attempts to be humorous.

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Like a Conquered Province

Like a Conquered Province: The Moral Ambiguity of America is a book of Paul Goodman's Massey Lectures for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation on topics of American pathologies, in particular, citizens not taking responsibility for the consequences of inequality and harmful technologies.

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Lilian Bowes Lyon

Lilian Helen Bowes Lyon (1895–1949) was a British poet.

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Lilian Gask

Lilian Fanny Gask (1865, Marylebone) - 17 November 1942, Camberwell was an author of children's books.

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Lina Eckenstein

Lina Dorina Johanna Eckenstein (23 September 1857 – 4 May 1931) was a British polymath and historian who was acknowledged as a philosopher and scholar in the women's movement.

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Lincoln by-election, 1973

The Lincoln by-election of 1 March 1973 saw the re-election of Dick Taverne as Member of Parliament for Lincoln as a Democratic Labour representative, after Taverne's pro-Common Market views saw him repudiated by the Lincoln Constituency Labour Party.

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Lionel Davidson

Lionel Davidson FRSL (31 March 192221 October 2009) was an English novelist who wrote spy thrillers.

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Lisa Hilton (writer)

Lisa Hilton is a British writer of history books, historical fiction, articles for magazines and newspapers including Vogue and The Sunday Telegraph, librettist, and as L.S. Hilton, psychological thrillers Maestra (2016) and Domina (2017).

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Lisa Tyrrell

Lisa Jane Tyrrell (born 7 June 1967 in Salford) is an English operatic soprano.

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List of 19th-century British periodicals

This is a list of British periodicals established in the 19th century, excluding daily newspapers.

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List of atheist authors

This is a list of atheist authors.

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List of atheists (surnames L to M)

Atheists with surnames starting L to M, sortable by the field for which they are mainly known and nationality.

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List of baritones in non-classical music

The baritone voice is typically written in the range from the second G below middle C to the G above middle C (G2-G4) although it can be extended at either end.

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List of Bilderberg participants

The following is a list of prominent persons who are known to have attended one or more conferences organized by the Bilderberg Group.

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List of British Jewish politicians

List of British Jewish politicians This list is Jewish people by birth but not necessarily Jewish people by religious belief and declaration, a list that includes people of Jewish descent who served as politicians in the United Kingdom and its predecessor states or who were born in the United Kingdom and had notable political careers abroad.

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List of cricket commentators

This is a list of media commentators and writers on the sport of cricket.

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List of cultural icons of England

This list of cultural icons of England is a list of people and things from any period which are independently considered to be cultural icons characteristic of England.

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List of deaths from drug overdose and intoxication

Drug overdose and intoxication are significant causes of accidental death, and can also be used as a form of suicide.

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List of endorsements in the Scottish independence referendum, 2014

This page lists individuals and organisations who publicly expressed an opinion regarding the Scottish independence referendum, 2014.

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List of expenses claims in the United Kingdom parliamentary expenses scandal

This article lists the published allegations of expenses abuse made against specific members of the British Parliament in the course of the United Kingdom parliamentary expenses scandal.

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List of Gateshead blue plaques

A long-running blue plaque scheme is in operation in Gateshead, Tyne and Wear.

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List of grenade attacks in Sweden

Bombings increased significantly in 2015, with Swedish police investigating around 100-150 explosions.

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List of iconic photographs

Many books have been produced about iconic photographs and giving suggested examples.

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List of Jewish American authors

This is a list of notable Jewish American authors.

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List of Libyan detainees at Guantanamo Bay

The United States Department of Defense acknowledges holding Libyan detainees in Guantanamo.

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List of magazines in the United Kingdom

The following is an incomplete list of current and defunct magazines published in the United Kingdom.

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List of Mayoites

Alumni of Mayo College and now Mayo College Girls School are often referred to as Mayoites, they include Statesmen, Writers, Athletes, Businesspersons, Diplomats, etc.

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List of most expensive films

Due to the secretive nature of Hollywood accounting it is not clear which film is the most expensive film ever made.

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List of newspaper columnists

This is a list of notable newspaper columnists.

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List of nicknames of Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom

This is a list of nicknames of Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom.

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List of Old Boys of St Aloysius' College

This is a list of St Aloysius' College Alumni.

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List of Old Etonians born in the 20th century

The following notable pupils of Eton College were born in the 20th century.

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List of Old Gowers

This is a List of Notable Old Gowers – former pupils of University College School.

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List of people associated with University College London

This is a list of people associated with University College London, including notable staff and alumni associated with the institution.

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List of people from Nottingham

This is a list of notable people with a Wikipedia page, who have been or are associated with Nottingham and district (postcodes NG1–NG16), arranged by category and date of birth.

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List of political magazines

This is a list of political magazines.

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List of political scandals in the United Kingdom

Political scandals in the United Kingdom are commonly referred to by the press and commentators as "'sleaze".

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List of Q&A panelists

Q&A is an Australian television program, broadcast on ABC hosted by news journalist Tony Jones.

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List of rampage killers (Asia)

This section of the list of rampage killers contains those cases that occurred in Asia.

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List of songs about or referencing Syd Barrett

Syd Barrett was known to be reclusive.

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List of The Thick of It characters

The Thick of It is a British television comedy programme that premiered in 2005 on BBC Four.

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List of University of Glasgow people

The following list of University of Glasgow people provides a selection of the well-known people who have studied or taught at the University of Glasgow since its inception in 1451.

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List of works by Clough Williams-Ellis

Compiled by Gareth Hughes, based on the preliminary list of drawings held in the RIBA Drawings Collection.

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List of works by Dorothy L. Sayers

Dorothy Leigh Sayers (usually stylised as Dorothy L. Sayers; 1893–1957) was an English crime writer, poet, playwright, essayist, translator and Christian humanist; she was also a student of classical and modern languages.

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List of works by H. Rider Haggard

H. Rider Haggard, KBE (1856 – 1925) was an English writer, largely of adventure fiction, but also of non-fiction.

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List of works by John Buchan

John Buchan, 1st Baron Tweedsmuir (1875 – 1940) was a Scottish novelist, historian, biographer and editor.

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Listen to Britain

Listen to Britain is a 1942 British propaganda short film by Humphrey Jennings and Stewart McAllister.

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Literary costumbrismo

Literary Costumbrismo is the manifestation of the artistic movement known as Costumbrismo in literature had since the XIX century and it reflects the uses and social customs, frequently without analyzing them, nor interpreting in a critical way, that attitude has to do more to the so called literary realism.

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Literary magazine

A literary magazine is a periodical devoted to literature in a broad sense.

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Lizzie Loudon

Lizzie Loudon is a British political adviser.

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Lobby Hero

Lobby Hero is a play by Kenneth Lonergan.

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Logie Bruce Lockhart

Logie Bruce Lockhart MA (Cantab.) (born 12 October 1921) is a British writer and journalist, formerly a Scottish international rugby union footballer and headmaster of Gresham's School.

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London mayoral election, 2016

The 2016 London mayoral election was held on 5 May 2016 to elect the Mayor of London, on the same day as the London Assembly election.

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London School of Economics

The London School of Economics (officially The London School of Economics and Political Science, often referred to as LSE) is a public research university located in London, England and a constituent college of the federal University of London.

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Look Up and Laugh

Look Up and Laugh is a 1935 British comedy film directed by Basil Dean and starring Gracie Fields, Alfred Drayton and Douglas Wakefield.

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Lord Berners

Gerald Hugh Tyrwhitt-Wilson, 14th Baron Berners (18 September 188319 April 1950), also known as Gerald Tyrwhitt, was a British composer, novelist, painter and aesthete.

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Lord Edward Thynne

Lord Edward Thynne (23 January 1807 – 4 February 1884) was an English nobleman.

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Lord John Scott

Lord John Douglas-Montagu-Scott (13 July 1809 – 3 January 1860) was a 19th-century landlord and MP for Roxburghshire.

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Lord Peter Wimsey

Lord Peter Death Bredon Wimsey is the fictional protagonist in a series of detective novels and short stories by Dorothy L. Sayers (and their continuation by Jill Paton Walsh).

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Lorna Doone (1990 film)

Lorna Doone is a 1990 British drama television film directed by Andrew Grieve and starring Polly Walker, Sean Bean and Clive Owen.

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Lost Horizon (1937 film)

Lost Horizon is a 1937 American drama-fantasy film directed by Frank Capra.

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Louisa Baring, Lady Ashburton

Louisa Caroline Baring, Lady Ashburton (5 March 1827 – 2 February 1903), was a Scottish art collector and philanthropist who had close connections with several artistic and literary figures of the period.

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Louise Cooper (financial analyst)

Louise Cooper is a British Chartered Financial Analyst, journalist, and Times columnist, known for her work on the BBC World Service between 2002 and 2011 as a presenter and senior economics journalist for shows including Newshour and Europe Today.

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Louise Stern

Louise Stern (born 1978) is an American writer and artist, and works around ideas of language, communication and isolation.

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Love letter

A love letter is a romantic way to express feelings of love in written form.

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Love Me Forever

Love Me Forever (also released as On Wings of Song) is a 1935 American drama film directed by Victor Schertzinger.

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Lucrezia Borgia

Lucrezia Borgia (Lucrècia Borja; 18 April 1480 – 24 June 1519) was an Italian noblewoman of the House of Borgia who was the daughter of Pope Alexander VI and Vannozza dei Cattanei.

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Lucy Beresford

Lucy Beresford is a British writer, broadcaster & psychotherapist, born in West Sussex.

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Lucy Riall

Lucy Riall was Professor of History at Birkbeck, University of London.

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Lucy Wadham

Lucy Wadham (born 1964) is a British novelist and writer of crime fiction.

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Luke Harding

Luke Daniel Harding (born 1968) is a British journalist who is a foreign correspondent for The Guardian.

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Lulu (opera)

Lulu (composed from 1929–1935, premièred incomplete in 1937 and complete in 1979) is an opera in three acts by Alban Berg.

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Lynton Crosby

Sir Lynton Keith Crosby (born 23 August 1956)Who's Who in Australia 2015, ConnectWeb.

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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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Lytton Strachey: A Critical Biography

Lytton Strachey: A Critical Biography is a book-length biography of Lytton Strachey by Michael Holroyd, the author's magnum opus.

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M. J. Hyland

M.J. Hyland (given names Maria Joan) is an ex-lawyer and the author of three multi-award-winning novels: How the Light Gets In (2004), Carry Me Down (2006) and This is How (2009).

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M. R. D. Foot

Michael Richard Daniell "M.

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Mabel McConnell Fitzgerald

Mabel Washington Fitzgerald (4 July 1884 – 24 April 1958) was an Irish republican, suffragette, and socialist.

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Macha Rosenthal

Macha Louis Rosenthal (March 14, 1917 – July 21, 1996) was an American poet, critic, editor, and teacher.

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Mad Love (1935 film)

Mad Love (also released as The Hands of Orlac) is a 1935 American horror film, an adaptation of Maurice Renard's story The Hands of Orlac.

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Madison Cawein

Madison Julius Cawein (March 23, 1865 – December 8, 1914) was a poet from Louisville, Kentucky.

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Maev Alexander

Maev Alexander, also Maeve Alexander (born Maev Alexandra Reid McConnell on 3 February 1948) is a Scottish television and stage actress.

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Mail robbery

Mail robbery is the robbery of mail usually when it is in the possession, custody, or control, of the delivering authority, which in most countries is the postal operator and can involve the theft of money or luxury goods.

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Malcolm Tucker

Malcolm Tucker is the antihero of the BBC political satire, The Thick of It, and is portrayed by Peter Capaldi.

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Malia Bouattia

Malia Mazia Bouattia (born October 1987) is the former president of the National Union of Students (NUS), elected at the National Conference in April 2016.

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Maltese United Kingdom integration referendum, 1956

A referendum on integration with the United Kingdom was held in Malta on 11 and 12 February 1956.

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Man on the Flying Trapeze

Man on the Flying Trapeze (also released as The Memory Expert) is a 1935 comedy film starring W. C. Fields as a henpecked husband.

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Mannenberg

"Mannenberg" is a Cape jazz song by South African musician Abdullah Ibrahim, first recorded in 1974.

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Mao Zedong

Mao Zedong (December 26, 1893September 9, 1976), commonly known as Chairman Mao, was a Chinese communist revolutionary who became the founding father of the People's Republic of China, which he ruled as the Chairman of the Communist Party of China from its establishment in 1949 until his death in 1976.

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Mao's Great Famine

Mao's Great Famine: The History of China's Most Devastating Catastrophe, 1958–62, is a 2010 book by professor and historian Frank Dikötter about the Great Chinese Famine of 1958–1962 in the People's Republic of China under Mao Zedong (1893–1976).

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Mao: The Unknown Story

Mao: The Unknown Story is a 2005 biography of Chinese Communist leader Mao Zedong (1893–1976) written by the wife and husband team of writer Jung Chang and historian Jon Halliday, who depict Mao as being responsible for more deaths in peacetime than Adolf Hitler or Joseph Stalin.

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María del Carmen

María del Carmen is an opera in three acts composed by Enrique Granados to a Spanish libretto by José Feliú i Codina based on his 1896 play of the same name.

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Marc Sinden

Marc Sinden (born 9 May 1954) is an English film director, actor and theatre producer.

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Marcus Bastiaan

Marcus Bastiaan (born 1990) is an Australian businessman and Liberal Party power broker.

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Marcus Berkmann

Marcus Berkmann (born 14 July 1960) is a journalist and author.

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Maremmano

The Maremmano is a breed of horse originating in the Maremma area of Tuscany and Lazio in Italy.

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Margaret Beckett

Dame Margaret Mary Beckett (born 15 January 1943) is a British Labour Party politician who has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for Derby South since 1983.

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Margaret Fingerhut

Margaret Fingerhut (born 30 March 1955) is a British classical pianist.

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Margaret Thatcher

Margaret Hilda Thatcher, Baroness Thatcher, (13 October 19258 April 2013) was a British stateswoman who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1979 to 1990 and Leader of the Conservative Party from 1975 to 1990.

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Margot Wallström

Margot Elisabeth Wallström (born 28 September 1954) is a Swedish Social Democratic politician and has served as Deputy Prime Minister of Sweden, Minister for Foreign Affairs and Minister for Nordic Cooperation since October 2014.

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Marian Maguire

Marian Maguire (born 1962) is a lithographer from New Zealand.

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Marie Breen Smyth

Marie Breen Smyth (born 26 January 1953) is an academic author, teacher and researcher from Northern Ireland.

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Marie Corelli

Marie Corelli (1 May 185521 April 1924) was an English novelist and mystic.

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Marie-Hortense Fiquet

Marie-Hortense Fiquet Cézanne (22 April 1850 – 1922) was a French artists' model.

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Marius Lyle

Marius Lyle was the pseudonym of Una Maud Lyle Smyth (10 July 1872 – 14 July 1964), a British novelist and short story writer.

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Mark Childress

Mark Childress (born 1957, Monroeville, Alabama) is an American novelist and southern writer.

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Mark Forsyth

Mark Forsyth (born 2 April 1977) is a writer whose work concerns the meaning and etymology of English words.

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Mark Juddery

Stanford Mark Juddery (8 March 197113 January 2015) was an Australian freelance journalist, author, humorist and columnist for The Canberra Times.

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Mark Law

Mark Alexander Law (born November 1944) is a British journalist and author.

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Mark Malloch Brown, Baron Malloch-Brown

George Mark Malloch Brown, Baron Malloch-Brown (born 16 September 1953) is a former UK government minister (2007 – 2009) and United Nations Deputy Secretary-General (2006), as well as development specialist at the World Bank and United Nations (1994 – 2005), and a communications consultant and journalist.

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Mark Spencer (British politician)

Mark Steven Spencer (born 20 January 1970) is a British Conservative Party politician.

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Mark Steyn

Mark Steyn is a Canadian author and political commentator.

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Mark Strauss (journalist)

Mark Strauss (born November 8, 1966) is a U.S. journalist.

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Marriage bar

A marriage bar is the custom and practice of restricting the employment of married women in general or in particular professions or occupations; and sometimes the practice called for the termination of employment of a woman on her marriage, especially in teaching, clerical and other occupations, and sometimes widowed women with children were still considered to be married preventing them from being hired.

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Marthe Armitage

Marthe Armitage is a British wallpaper designer whose work is characterized by unique hand-drawn designs that are hand printed from lino blocks, varying in size.

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Martin Adolf Bormann

Martin Adolf Bormann (born Adolf Martin Bormann; in Grünwald – in Herdecke) was a German theologian laicized Roman Catholic priest, the eldest of the ten children of Martin Bormann and a godson of Adolf Hitler.

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Martin Amis

Martin Louis Amis (born 25 August 1949) is a British novelist, essayist and memoirist.

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Martin Bright

Martin Derek Bright (born 5 June 1966) is a British journalist.

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Martin Charteris, Baron Charteris of Amisfield

Lieutenant-Colonel Martin Michael Charles Charteris, Baron Charteris of Amisfield, (7 September 191323 December 1999) was a British Army officer and courtier of Queen Elizabeth II.

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Martin Durkin (television director)

Martin Richard Durkin (born 23 January 1962) is a television producer and director, particularly on Britain's Channel 4.

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Martin Hoffman (bridge)

Martin Joseph Hoffman (15 November 1929 – 15 May 2018) was a Czech-born British professional bridge player and writer.

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Martin Short (author)

Martin Short (born 1943) is British TV documentary producer and author.

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Martin Vander Weyer

Martin Vander Weyer is a British financial journalist, business editor of The Spectator, and a leading figure within the British-American Project.

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Martin Wiener

Martin Joel Wiener (born 1941) is an American academic and author.

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Mary and Catherine Lee

Mary Susanna Lee (1846–1908) and her sister Catherine Harriet Lee (1847–1914) were English writers of children's fiction.

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Mary Anerley

Mary Anerley: a Yorkshire tale is a three-volume novel by R. D. Blackmore published in 1880.

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Mary Berry (writer, born 1763)

Mary Berry (16 March 1763 – 20 November 1852) was an English non-fiction writer born in Kirkbridge, North Yorkshire.

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Mary Eliza Kennard

Mary Eliza Kennard (1850–1936) was an English novelist and writer of non-fiction.

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Mary Kenny

Mary Kenny (born 4 April 1944, Dublin, Ireland) is an Irish author, broadcaster, playwright and journalist.

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Mary Kissel

Mary Elizabeth Kissel (born December 13, 1976) is an American journalist.

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Mary Whitehouse

Constance Mary Whitehouse (née Hutcheson; 13 June 191023 November 2001) was an English social activist, known for her strong opposition to social liberalism and the mainstream British media, both of which she accused of encouraging a more permissive society.

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Matilda of Hungary

Matilda of Hungary is an opera in three acts composed by William Vincent Wallace to an English libretto by Alfred Bunn.

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Matt Cavanagh

Matt Cavanagh (born 1971) was a special adviser in the UK Labour government (2003–10).

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Matt Lynn

Matt Lynn or Matthew Lynn (born 1962) is a British thriller writer, financial journalist and publisher.

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Matt Nixson

Matt Nixson is a British journalist, PR executive and author.

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Matt Percival

Matt Percival is a British cartoonist known primarily for single panel gag cartoons.

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Matt Pritchett

Matthew Pritchett MBE (born 14 July 1964) has been the pocket cartoonist on The Daily Telegraph newspaper under the pen name Matt since 1988.

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Matthew Corbally

Matthew Elias Corbally (April 1797 – 25 November 1870) was an Irish Liberal, Whig and Independent Irish Party politician.

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Matthew Curtis (composer)

Matthew Curtis (born 1959 in Cumbria, England) is a British classical composer.

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Matthew d'Ancona

Matthew Robert Ralph d'Ancona (born 27 January 1968) is an English journalist.

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Matthew Orr

Matthew Orr (born 1962) is an entrepreneur living in the UK.

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Matthew Parris

Matthew Francis Parris (born 7 August 1949) is a South African-British political writer and broadcaster, formerly a Conservative Member of Parliament.

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Matthew Stadlen

Matthew Stadlen (born 7 December 1979) is an English radio and television presenter, producer and writer.

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Maudie Littlehampton

Maud, Countess of Littlehampton, known as Maudie, is a cartoon character created by Osbert Lancaster.

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Maurice Cowling

Maurice John Cowling (6 September 1926 – 24 August 2005) was a British historian and a Fellow of Peterhouse, Cambridge.

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Maurice Healy (writer)

Maurice F. Healy, (1887–1943) was an Irish lawyer and author, who is best remembered for his legal memoir The Old Munster Circuit.

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Maurice Newman

Maurice Lionel Newman AC (born 20 April 1938 in Ilford, England) is an Australian businessman who has served in a range of public roles, including as Chairperson of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, chair of the board of the Australian Stock Exchange, Chancellor of Macquarie University, and a member of the Prime Minister's Business Advisory Council from September 2013 to September 2015.

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Max Benitz

Max Benitz (born 14 March 1985) is an English writer, journalist, and former film and TV actor.

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Max Hastings

Sir Max Hugh Macdonald Hastings (born 28 December 1945) is a British journalist, who has worked as a foreign correspondent for the BBC, editor-in-chief of The Daily Telegraph, and editor of the Evening Standard.

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Max Pemberton (doctor)

Max Pemberton is a British medical doctor, journalist and author.

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Maximos V Hakim

Maximos V Hakim (ماكسيموس الخامس حكيم; May 18, 1908, in Tanta, Egypt – June 29, 2001, Beirut, Lebanon) was elected Patriarch of Antioch and All the East, and Alexandria and Jerusalem of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church in 1967 and served until 2000.

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Maya Jasanoff

Maya R. Jasanoff is an American academic.

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Mayor of London

The Mayor of London is the head of the executive body of the Greater London Authority.

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Me and Marlborough

Me and Marlborough is a 1935 British comedy film, directed by Victor Saville, and starring Cicely Courtneidge, Tom Walls, Barry MacKay, Peter Gawthorne, Henry Oscar and Cecil Parker.

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Media of the United Kingdom

There are several different types of media in the United Kingdom: television, radio, newspapers, magazines and websites.

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Media portrayal of the Ukrainian crisis

Media portrayals of the Ukrainian crisis, including 2014 unrest and the 2014 Ukrainian revolution following the Euromaidan movement, differed widely between Ukrainian, western and Russian media.

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Medway News

The Medway News was a weekly newspaper covering the Medway Towns in Kent, England.

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Melanie Phillips

Melanie Phillips (born 4 June 1951) is a British journalist, author, and public commentator.

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Melissa Kite

Melissa Louise Kite (born 1972) is a journalist, and current columnist for The Spectator and GQ.

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Memoirs of a Dervish

Memoirs of a Dervish: Sufis, Mystics and the Sixties is an autobiography by Robert Irwin, a British historian, novelist, and writer on Arabic literature.

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Memoirs of My Life and Writings

Memoirs of My Life and Writings (1796) is an account of the historian Edward Gibbon's life, compiled after his death by his friend Lord Sheffield from six fragmentary autobiographical works Gibbon wrote during his last years.

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Mental health in Russia

Mental health in Russia is covered by a law, known under its official name—the Law of the Russian Federation "On Psychiatric Care and Guarantees of Citizens' Rights during Its Provision" (Зако́н Росси́йской Федера́ции «О психиатри́ческой по́мощи и гара́нтиях прав гра́ждан при её оказа́нии», Zakon Possiyskoy Federatsii "O psikhiatricheskoy pomoshchi i garantyakh prav grazhdan pri yeyo okazanii"), which is the basic legal act that regulates psychiatric care in the Russian Federation and applies not only to persons with mental disorders but all citizens.

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Meredith Townsend

Meredith White Townsend (1831–1911) was an English journalist and editor of The Spectator.

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Merryn Somerset Webb

Merryn Somerset Webb (born) is the Editor in chief of UK personal finance magazine MoneyWeek, writes for the Financial Times, the Sunday Post and Saga Magazine and is a radio and television commentator on financial matters.

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Michael Argyle (judge)

His Honour James Morton Michael Victor Argyle, (31 August 1915 – 4 January 1999) was a British judge at the Central Criminal Court of the United Kingdom from 1970 to 1988.

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Michael Baigent

Michael Baigent (born Michael Barry Meehan, 27 February 1948 – 17 June 2013) was an author and speculative theorist who co-wrote a number of books that question mainstream perceptions of history and the life of Jesus.

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Michael Billington (critic)

Michael Keith Billington OBE (born 16 November 1939) is a British author and arts critic.

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Michael Connarty

Michael Connarty (born 3 September 1947) is a British Labour Party politician, who served as the Member of Parliament for Linlithgow and Falkirk East from 2005 until 2015, and Falkirk East (1992–2005).

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Michael Crick

Michael Lawrence Crick (born 21 May 1958)Ian Burrell The Independent website, 19 September 2011.

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Michael ffolkes

Michael Ffolkes (6 June 1925 – 18 October 1988) was a British illustrator and cartoonist most famous for his work on the Peter Simple column in The Daily Telegraph.

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Michael Freedland

Michael Rodney Freedland (born 18 December 1934), Debrett's is a British biographer, journalist and broadcaster.

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Michael Gove

Michael Andrew Gove (born 26 August 1967) is a British Conservative politician, who was Secretary of State for Education from 2010 to 2014 and Secretary of State for Justice from 2015 to 2016.

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Michael Heath (cartoonist)

Michael John Heath is a British strip cartoonist and illustrator.

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Michael Henderson (writer)

Michael Henderson (born 1958) is a British journalist, born in Manchester, and raised in Bolton.

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Michael Heseltine

Michael Ray Dibdin Heseltine, Baron Heseltine, (born 21 March 1933) is a British Conservative politician and businessman.

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Michael Howard

Michael Howard, Baron Howard of Lympne, (born 7 July 1941), is a British politician who served as the Leader of the Conservative Party and Leader of the Opposition from November 2003 to December 2005.

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Michael I of Romania

Michael I (Mihai I; 25 October 1921 – 5 December 2017) was the last King of Romania, reigning from 20 July 1927 to 8 June 1930 and again from 6 September 1940 until his abdication on 30 December 1947.

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Michael Knighton

Michael Knighton (born 4 October 1951) is an English businessman, best known for his involvement in Manchester United and Carlisle United football clubs.

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Michael Lewis

Michael Monroe Lewis (born October 15, 1960) is an American non-fiction author and financial journalist.

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Michael Madhusudan Dutt

Michael Madhusudan Dutt, or Michael Madhusudan Dutta (মাইকেল মধুসূদন দত্ত; 25 January 1824 – 29 June 1873) was a popular 19th-century Bengali poet and dramatist.

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Michael Moran (journalist)

Michael E. Moran (born May 1962 in Kearny, New Jersey) is an American author and analyst of international affairs, a digital documentarian who has held senior positions at a host of media, financial services, and consulting organizations.

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Michael Nyman

Michael Laurence Nyman, CBE (born 23 March 1944) is an English composer of minimalist music, pianist, librettist and musicologist, known for numerous film scores (many written during his lengthy collaboration with the filmmaker Peter Greenaway), and his multi-platinum soundtrack album to Jane Campion's The Piano.

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Michael Paraskos

Michael Paraskos, FHEA, FRSA (born 1969) is a novelist, lecturer and writer on art, and is the son of the Cypriot artist Stass Paraskos.

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Michael Roemer

Michael Roemer (born January 1, 1928) is a film director, producer and writer.

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Michael Trend

The Honourable Michael St John Trend, CBE (born 19 April 1952 in Greenwich) is a former Conservative Party politician in the United Kingdom.

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Michael Wynn-Jones

Michael Wynn-Jones is a Welsh-born writer, editor and publisher.

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Michael Young, Baron Young of Dartington

Michael Young, Baron Young of Dartington (9 August 1915 – 14 January 2002) was a British sociologist, social activist and politician who coined the term "meritocracy".

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Michelle Donelan

Michelle Emma May Elizabeth Donelan (born 8 April 1984, Whitley, Cheshire) is a British Conservative Party politician.

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Middle-class values

The term middle-class values is used by various writers and politicians to include such qualities as hard work, self-discipline, thrift, honesty, aspiration and ambition.

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Middlemarch

Middlemarch, A Study of Provincial Life is a novel by the English author George Eliot, (Mary Anne Evans) first published in eight installments (volumes) during 1871–72.

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Middlesex (novel)

Middlesex is a Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Jeffrey Eugenides published in 2002.

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Midnight Man (miniseries)

Midnight Man is a 2008 British television serial produced by Carnival Films for the ITV network.

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Midshipman Easy

Midshipman Easy is a 1935 British adventure film directed by Carol Reed and starring Hughie Green, Margaret Lockwood and Harry Tate.

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Mimi (film)

Mimi is a 1935 British romance film directed by Paul L. Stein and starring Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Gertrude Lawrence and Diana Napier.

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Mimi Spencer

Mimi Spencer (born 1967) is a journalist and author.

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Miners' International Federation

The Miners' International Federation (MIF), sometimes known as the International Federation of Miners, was a global union federation of trade unions.

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Minnow on the Say (novel)

Minnow on the Say is a children's novel written by Philippa Pearce, first published by Oxford University Press in 1955.

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Mirabelle (London restaurant)

Mirabelle was a restaurant in the Mayfair area of London.

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Mirella Ricciardi

Mirella Ricciardi (born 14 July 1931), described by one enthusiast as a "renowned creative force" is a Kenyan born photographer and author.

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Miriam Gross

Miriam Gross (Lady Owen) is a literary editor and writer in Britain.

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Miron Grindea

Miron Grindea OBE (31 January 1909 – 18 November 1995) was a Romanian-born literary journalist and the editor of ADAM International Review, a literary magazine published for more than 50 years.

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Misandry

Misandry is the hatred of, contempt for, or prejudice against men or boys.

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Mo Ansar

Mohammed "Mo" Ansar (born 6 April 1974) is a British Muslim political and social commentator.

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Modern Cookery for Private Families

Modern Cookery for Private Families is an English cookery book by Eliza Acton (1799–1859).

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Monarchism

Monarchism is the advocacy of a monarch or monarchical rule.

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Monica Furlong

Monica Furlong (17 January 1930 – 14 January 2003) was a British author, journalist, and activist.

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Montague Haltrecht

Montague Haltrecht (27 February 1932 – 27 March 2010) was an English writer, literary critic, model and radio and TV presenter.

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Moonbat

"Moonbat" is a pejorative political epithet used in United States politics, referring to liberals, progressives, or leftists, a clear parallel to the pejorative "Wingnut" attributed to American conservatives, and right wing politics.

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Moonlight (2016 film)

Moonlight is a 2016 American coming-of-age drama film written and directed by Barry Jenkins, based on Tarell Alvin McCraney's unpublished semi-autobiographical play In Moonlight Black Boys Look Blue.

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Moonraker (novel)

Moonraker is the third novel by the British author Ian Fleming to feature his fictional British Secret Service agent James Bond.

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Mordaunt Shairp

Mordaunt Shairp (13 March 1887 – 18 January 1939) was an English dramatist and screenwriter born at Totnes.

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Morgan Phillips

Morgan Walter Phillips (18 June 1902 – 15 January 1963) was a colliery worker and trade union activist who became the General Secretary of the British Labour Party, involved in two of the party's election victories.

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Morris Bishop

Morris Gilbert Bishop (April 15, 1893 – November 20, 1973) was an American scholar, historian, biographer, essayist, translator, anthologist and versifier.

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Mortara case

The Mortara case (caso Mortara) was an Italian cause célèbre that captured the attention of much of Europe and North America in the 1850s and 1860s.

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Moscow Nights (film)

This film is not to be confused with the very popular Russian Song Moscow Nights Moscow Nights (released as I Stand Condemned in the United States) is a 1935 British drama film directed by Anthony Asquith and starring Laurence Olivier, Penelope Dudley-Ward and Harry Baur.

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Mount Ararat

Mount Ararat (Ağrı Dağı; Մասիս, Masis and Արարատ, Ararat) is a snow-capped and dormant compound volcano in the extreme east of Turkey.

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Mrs. Bridge

Mrs.

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Muhammad: His Life Based on the Earliest Sources

Muhammad: His Life Based on the Earliest Sources is a 1983 biography of the Islamic prophet Muhammad by Martin Lings.

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Murder of Muriel McKay

Muriel McKay (1914 - 1970) was a British woman who was kidnapped on December 29, 1969, and presumed murdered soon after.

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Murder of Simon Dale

Simon Dale (17 June 1919 – September 1987) was an English retired architect whose murder in September 1987 remains unsolved.

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Murphy's law

Murphy's law is an adage or epigram that is typically stated as: "Anything that can go wrong will go wrong".

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Muscular liberalism

Muscular liberalism is a form of liberalism advocated by British Prime Minister David Cameron that describes his policy towards state multiculturalism.

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Museum of Croydon

The Museum of Croydon is a museum located within the Croydon Clocktower arts facility in Central Croydon, England.

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Museum of Sex

The Museum of Sex, also known as MoSex, is a sex museum located at 233 Fifth Avenue at the corner of East 27th Street in Manhattan, New York City.

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Musicians of the RMS Titanic

The musicians of the RMS ''Titanic'' all perished when the ship sank in 1912.

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My Childhood (Gorky book)

My Childhood, Autobiography Part I (translit) is an autobiographical work by Maxim Gorky, published in Russian in 1913–14, and in English in 1920.

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My Country

"My Country" is an iconic patriotic poem about Australia, written by Dorothea Mackellar (1885–1968) at the age of 19 while homesick in the United Kingdom.

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My Life in Orange

My Life in Orange: Growing Up with the Guru is an account of a child growing up in the Rajneesh movement led by Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh.

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Nadine Dorries

Nadine Vanessa Dorries (née Bargery; born 21 May 1957) is a British Conservative politician.

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Nairn

Nairn (Gaelic: Inbhir Narann) is a town and former burgh in the Highland council area of Scotland.

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Nairn Academy

Nairn Academy is a secondary school in Nairn, Scotland.

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Nanny state

Nanny state is a conservative term of British origin that conveys a view that a government or its policies are overprotective or interfering unduly with personal choice.

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Naomie Harris

Naomie Melanie Harris, (born 6 September 1976) is an English actress.

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Narmadashankar Dave

Narmadashankar Lalshankar Dave (24 August 1833 – 26 February 1886), popularly known as Narmad, was a Gujarati poet, playwright, essayist, orator, lexicographer and reformer under the British Raj.

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National Health Service (England)

The National Health Service (NHS) is the publicly funded national healthcare system for England and one of the four National Health Services for each constituent country of the United Kingdom.

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National symbols of England

The national symbols of England are things which are emblematic, representative or otherwise characteristic of England or English culture.

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Nazir Ahmed, Baron Ahmed

Nazir Ahmed, Baron Ahmed (born 24 April 1957) is a member of the British House of Lords.

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Neil Balfour

Neil Roxburgh Balfour (born 12 August 1944) is a British merchant banker and financier who had a second career as a politician.

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Neil Brown (Australian politician)

Neil Anthony Brown QC (born 22 February 1940) is an Australian lawyer, political commentator, and former politician.

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Neil Hamilton (politician)

Mostyn Neil Hamilton (born 9 March 1949) is a British politician, barrister, and former teacher.

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Nesta Wyn Ellis

Nesta Myfanwy Wyn Ellis (born November 1940) is a journalist and author of Welsh origin whose books include a biography of the former prime minister Sir John Major.

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New Classical architecture

New Classical architecture is a contemporary movement in architecture that continues the practice of classical and traditional architecture.

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New Inn Hall

New Inn Hall was one of the earliest medieval Halls of the University of Oxford.

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New Reformation

New Reformation: Notes of a Neolithic Conservative is a 1970 book of social commentary by Paul Goodman best known as his apologia pro vita sua before his death two years later.

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New Social Alliance

The New Social Alliance or New Social Movement was an idea supported by some British Conservatives in 1871 for an alliance between working-class leaders and aristocratic Conservatives to ameliorate the conditions of the working class.

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New Statesman

The New Statesman is a British political and cultural magazine published in London.

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New Zealand Company

The New Zealand Company was a 19th-century English company that played a key role in the colonisation of New Zealand.

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News magazine

A news magazine is a typed, printed, and published piece of paper, magazine or a radio or television program, usually weekly, consisting of articles about current events.

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News UK

News Corp UK & Ireland Limited (trading as News UK, formerly News International and NI Group), is a British newspaper publisher, and a wholly owned subsidiary of the American mass media conglomerate News Corp.

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Nicholas Budgen

Nicholas William Budgen (3 November 1937 – 26 October 1998), often called Nick Budgen, was a British Conservative Party politician.

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Nicholas Burgess Farrell

Nicholas Burgess Farrell (born 2 October 1958) is an English journalist and the author of Mussolini: A New Life.

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Nicholas Coleridge

Nicholas David Coleridge CBE (born 4 March 1957) is Chairman of Condé Nast Britain, Chairman of the Victoria and Albert Museum, Chairman of the Prince of Wales' Campaign for Wool and Chairman of the Gilbert Trust for the Arts.

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Nicholas Garland

Nicholas Withycombe Garland OBE (born 1 September 1935) is a British political cartoonist.

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Nicholas Newman

Nicholas Newman is a fictional character from the American CBS soap opera The Young and the Restless.

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Nicholas Ridley, Baron Ridley of Liddesdale

Nicholas Ridley, Baron Ridley of Liddesdale, PC (17 February 1929 – 4 March 1993) was a British Conservative politician and government minister.

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Nick Cater

Nicholas Charles Cater (born 7 July 1958) is a British-born Australian journalist and author who writes on culture and politics.

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Nick Cohen

Nicholas Cohen (born 1961) is a British journalist, author and political commentator.

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Nick Davies

Nicholas Davies (born 28 March 1953) is a British investigative journalist, writer and documentary maker.

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Nick Groom

Nicholas Michael Groom FRSA (born 1966) is Professor of English Literature at the University of Exeter, an author on subjects ranging from the history of the Union Jack to Thomas Chatterton, has edited several books and regularly appears on television, radio and at literary festivals as an authority on English Literature, seasonal customs, J. R. R. Tolkien, the ‘Gothic’ and ‘British’ and 'English' identities.

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Nick Newman

Nick Newman (born 17 July 1958) is a satirical British cartoonist and comedy scriptwriter.

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Nicky Crane

Nicola Vincenzo "Nicky" Crane (21 May 1958 – 8 December 1993) was a British neo-Nazi activist.

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Nicky Haslam

Nicholas Ponsonby Haslam (born 27 September 1939) is an English interior designer and socialite, and founder of the London-based interior design firm, NH Studio Ltd.

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Nigel Farage

Nigel Paul Farage (While Farage himself pronounces it thus, he has stated that he does not mind if the alternative pronunciation of is used by others –, Newsnight (YouTube – UKIP webmaster's channel), 18 April 2010. Retrieved 13 May 2013. born 3 April 1964) is a British politician, broadcaster and political analyst who was the leader of the UK Independence Party (UKIP) from 2006 to 2009 and again from 2010 to 2016.

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Nigel Farndale

Nigel Farndale (born 30 September 1964) is a British author and journalist, known for his broadsheet interviews and his novel The Blasphemer.

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Nigel H. Jones

Nigel Jones (born 1951) is a British historian, journalist and biographer.

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Nigel Lawson

Nigel Lawson, Baron Lawson of Blaby, (born 11 March 1932) is a British Conservative politician and journalist.

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Nigel Mills

Nigel John Mills (born 1974) is a Conservative Party politician in England.

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Nigel Nicolson

Nigel Nicolson (19 January 1917 – 23 September 2004) was an English writer, publisher and politician.

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Nigel Rees

Nigel Rees (born 5 June 1944 near Liverpool) is an English writer and broadcaster, best known for devising and hosting the long-running Radio 4 panel game Quote... Unquote (since 1976) and as the author of more than fifty books – mostly works of reference on language, and humour in language.

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Nigel Short

Nigel David Short (born 1 June 1965) is an English chess grandmaster, chess columnist, chess coach and chess commentator.

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Nigella Lawson

Nigella Lucy Lawson (born 6 January 1960) is an English journalist, broadcaster, television personality, gourmet, and food writer.

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Night Is Darkest

Night Is Darkest is a novel by the French writer Georges Bernanos, published posthumously in 1950.

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Night of January 16th

Night of January 16th is a theatrical play by Russian-American author Ayn Rand, inspired by the death of the "Match King", Ivar Kreuger.

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Nightmares Fear Factory

The Nightmares Fear Factory is a psychological haunted house attraction in Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada.

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Nikolay Novikov

Nikolay Ivanovich Novikov (Никола́й Ива́нович Новико́в) (Moscow Governorate –. Moscow Governorate) was a Russian writer and philanthropist most representative of his country's Enlightenment.

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Nimrod Kamer

Nimrod Kamer is a satirist, comedy writer/performer and journalist based in London.

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Nina Munk

Nina Munk (born 1967) is a Canadian-American journalist and non-fiction author.

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Ninth Doctor

The Ninth Doctor is an incarnation of the Doctor, the protagonist of the BBC science fiction television programme Doctor Who.

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No More Ladies

No More Ladies is a 1935 American romantic comedy film directed by Edward H. Griffith.

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No Pressure (film)

No Pressure is a 2010 short film produced by the global warming mitigation campaign 10:10, written by Richard Curtis and Franny Armstrong, and directed by Dougal Wilson.

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Noblesse Oblige (book)

Noblesse Oblige: An Enquiry Into the Identifiable Characteristics of the English Aristocracy (1956) is a book that purports to be edited by Nancy Mitford, illustrated by Osbert Lancaster, caricaturist of English manners, and published by Hamish Hamilton.

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Noel Malcolm

Sir Noel Robert Malcolm, (born 26 December 1956) is an English political journalist, historian and academic.

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Noel Skelton

Archibald Noel Skelton (1 July 1880 – 22 November 1935) was a Scottish Unionist politician, journalist and intellectual.

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Norah C. James

Norah Margaret Ruth Cordner James (1896 – 19 November 1979) was a prolific English novelist whose first book Sleeveless Errand (1929) was ruled obscene at the Bow Street Police Court.

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Norman Baker

Norman John Baker (born 26 July 1957) is a Liberal Democrat politician in the United Kingdom who was the Member of Parliament (MP) for Lewes in East Sussex from the 1997 general election to his defeat in 2015.

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Norman Lebrecht

Norman Lebrecht (born 11 July 1948 in London) is a British commentator on music and cultural affairs, a novelist, and the author of the classical music blog Slipped Disc.

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Norman Rosenthal

Sir Norman Rosenthal (born 1944) is a British independent curator and art historian.

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Norman Tebbit

Norman Beresford Tebbit, Baron Tebbit, (born 29 March 1931) is a British politician and life peer.

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Northanger Abbey (2007 film)

Northanger Abbey is a 2007 British television film adaptation of Jane Austen's eponymous novel.

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Northern & Shell

Northern & Shell (holding company name Northern and Shell Network Ltd) is a British publishing group, launched and founded in December 1974 and currently owned by Richard Desmond.

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Nothing Like a Dame

Nothing Like a Dame: The Scandals of Shirley Porter is a 2006 biography by British journalist Andrew Hosken.

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Nottingham Post

The Nottingham Post (formerly the Nottingham Evening Post) is an English tabloid newspaper which serves Nottingham, Nottinghamshire and parts of Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Lincolnshire.

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Ntokozo Qwabe

Ntokozo Qwabe (born 1991) is a South African Rhodes Scholar who was one of the founders of the Rhodes Must Fall campaign at Oxford University.

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Nudge theory

Nudge is a concept in behavioral science, political theory and economics which proposes positive reinforcement and indirect suggestions as ways to influence the behavior and decision making of groups or individuals.

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Octopussy and The Living Daylights

Octopussy and The Living Daylights (sometimes published as Octopussy) is the fourteenth and final James Bond book written by Ian Fleming in the Bond series.

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Oil for the Lamps of China (film)

Oil for the Lamps of China is a 1935 drama film starring Pat O'Brien and Josephine Hutchinson.

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Old Dunstonian Association

Old Dunstonian Association (ODA) is the alumni organisation for former pupils and staff of St Dunstan's College.

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Oldham West and Royton by-election, 2015

The Oldham West and Royton by-election was a UK parliamentary by-election held on 3 December 2015 in the constituency of Oldham West and Royton in Greater Manchester.

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Olga Georges-Picot

Olga Georges-Picot (6 January 1940 – 19 June 1997) was a French actress.

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Olive Mudie-Cooke

Olive Mudie-Cooke (1890-11 September 1925) was a British artist who is best known for the paintings she created during the First World War.

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Oliver Preston

Oliver Preston (born 21 December 1962) is a British cartoonist, publisher, and chairman and co-founder of The Cartoon Museum in London.

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Oliver Warner

Oliver Martin Wilson Warner (1903 – 14 August 1976) was a well-known British naval historian and writer.

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Olivia Cole (poet)

Olivia Cole (born 1981) is a British poet.

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Olivia Manning

Olivia Mary Manning (2 March 1908 – 23 July 1980) was a British novelist, poet, writer, and reviewer.

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Olivia Sudjic

Olivia Sudjic (born 1988) is a British fiction writer whose first book Sympathy received positive reviews in the press, from publications like the New York Times, The Guardian and The New Republic.

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Olof von Dalin

Olof von Dalin (29 August 1708 – 12 August 1763) was a Swedish nobleman, poet, historian and courtier.

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On the Buses (film)

On the Buses is a 1971 British comedy film directed by Harry Booth and starring Reg Varney and Doris Hare.

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On the Yankee Station

On the Yankee Station is a short story collection by William Boyd.

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One New York Night

One New York Night (also released as The Trunk Mystery) is a 1935 American comedy film directed by Jack Conway and written by Frank Davis.

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Open Europe

Open Europe is a socially and economically liberal pan-European think tank and campaign group with offices in London and Brussels and an independent partner organisation in Berlin operated by staff from a number of EU states.

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Operation Yewtree

Operation Yewtree is a police investigation into sexual abuse allegations, predominantly the abuse of children, against the British media personality Jimmy Savile and others.

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Ordinary Dreams; or How to Survive a Meltdown with Flair

Ordinary Dreams; Or How to Survive a Meltdown with Flair, is a black comedy, written by Marcus Markou, which premiered at the Trafalgar Studios on 14 May 2009 and ran till 6 June.

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Organised Independents

The Organised Independents (often abbreviated to OI) are a grouping within the National Union of Students of the United Kingdom.

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Osbert Lancaster

Sir Osbert Lancaster, CBE (4 August 1908 – 27 July 1986) was an English cartoonist, architectural historian, stage designer and author.

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Oscar Humphries

Oscar Humphries (born April 1981) is an Australian fine art and design dealer and journalist.

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Our Friends in the North

Our Friends in the North is a British television drama serial produced by the BBC.

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Our Last Best Chance

Our Last Best Chance: The Pursuit of Peace in a Time of Peril (Arabic: فرصتنا الأخيرة: السعي نحو السلام في وقت الخطر) is a book written by King Abdullah II of Jordan and published by Viking Press in New York City.

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Ourselves Alone (film)

Ourselves Alone (released in the US as River of Unrest) is a 1936 British film depicting a love story set against the backdrop of the Irish War of Independence.

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Outsiders (Australian TV program)

Outsiders is an Australian television news and commentary program broadcast weekly on Sky News Australia.

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Owen Green

Sir Owen Whitley Green (1925–2017) was chief executive and chairman of the British industrial conglomerate BTR.

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Owen Oyston

Owen John Oyston (born 3 January 1934) is an English businessman who is the majority owner of Blackpool Football Club.

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Ox-Tales

Ox-Tales refers to four anthologies of short stories written by 38 of the UK's best known authors.

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Oxbridge

Oxbridge is a portmanteau of "Oxford" and "Cambridge"; the two oldest, most prestigious, and consistently most highly-ranked universities in the United Kingdom.

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Oxford University Conservative Association

The Oxford University Conservative Association (OUCA) is a student Conservative association founded in 1924, whose members are drawn from the University of Oxford.

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OZ (magazine)

OZ was an underground alternative magazine.

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P. H. B. Lyon

Percy Hugh Beverley Lyon MC (1893–1986) was a 20th-century British poet and educator, a winner of the Newdigate Prize and headmaster of Rugby School from 1931 to 1948.

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P. J. Kavanagh

P.J. Kavanagh FRSL (6 January 1931 – 26 August 2015) was an English poet, lecturer, actor, broadcaster and columnist.

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Pablo Ganguli

Pablo Ganguli (born 23 November 1983) is a cultural entrepreneur, artist, producer, director and impresario who has created and directed several international festivals, movements and summits of arts, literature, media, film, fashion and culture, through his organisation Liberatum.

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Pacificism

Pacificism is the general term for ethical opposition to violence or war, except in cases where force is deemed absolutely necessary to advance the cause of peace.

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Pakistan and state-sponsored terrorism

Pakistan has long been accused by its neighbours India and Afghanistan, and western nations like the United StatesInternational Terrorism: Threats and Responses: Hearings Before the Committee on the Judiciary By United States Congress House Committee on the Judiciary,, 1996, pp.

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Palais Rohan, Strasbourg

The Palais Rohan (Rohan Palace) in Strasbourg is the former residence of the prince-bishops and cardinals of the House of Rohan, an ancient French noble family originally from Brittany.

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Paleolibertarianism

Paleolibertarianism is a variety of libertarianism developed by anarcho-capitalist theorists Murray Rothbard and Llewellyn Rockwell that combines conservative cultural values and social philosophy with a libertarian opposition to government intervention.

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Pan-Asianism

Pan-Asianism (also known as Asianism or Greater Asianism) is an ideology that promotes the unity of Asian peoples.

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Pangbourne College

Pangbourne College is a co-educational independent day and boarding school located in the civil parish of Pangbourne, in the English county of Berkshire.

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Paris in Spring

Paris in Spring (also released as Paris Love Song) is a 1935 black and white musical comedy film directed by Lewis Milestone for Paramount Pictures.

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Parterre (theater audience)

The word parterre comes from the French par and terre and literally translated means “on the ground.” Originally, the term was used in the 16th century to refer to a formal ornamental garden, but by the mid-17th century, it was increasingly used to refer both to the ground level of a theatre where spectators stood to watch performances and to the group of spectators who occupied that space.

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Pas de légumes

Pas de légumes is a ballet created in 1982 with choreography by Frederick Ashton, to the music of Rossini arranged by John Dalby.

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Pastors and Masters

Pastors and Masters (Pastors and Masters: A Study in the first edition) is a short novel by Ivy Compton-Burnett published in 1925.

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Patricia Highsmith

Patricia Highsmith (January 19, 1921 – February 4, 1995) was an American novelist and short story writer best known for her psychological thrillers, including her series of five novels based on the character of Tom Ripley.

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Patrick Allitt

Patrick N. Allitt (born 1956) is a historian who has written seven books on religious history, education, politics and environmental history and teaches at Emory University in Atlanta.

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Patrick Cosgrave

Patrick John Francis Cosgrave (28 September 1941 – 16 September 2001) was an Anglophile Irish journalist and writer, and a staunch supporter of the British Conservative Party.

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Patrick Flanery

Patrick Flanery (born 1974, Omaha, Nebraska) is an American author and academic.

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Patrick Kavanagh

Patrick Kavanagh (21 October 1904 – 30 November 1967) was an Irish poet and novelist.

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Patrick Marnham

Patrick Marnham is an English writer, journalist and biographer.

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Patrick Skene Catling

Patrick Skene Catling (born 14 February 1925) is a British journalist, author and book reviewer best known for writing The Chocolate Touch in 1952.

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Patrick Sookhdeo

Patrick Sookhdeo (born 20 March 1947) is the director of the Institute for the Study of Islam and Christianity and was for 22 years International Director of the Barnabas Fund.

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Patrick West

Patrick West (born 1974, London) is a freelance writer based in the UK and Ireland.

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Paul Antony-Barber

Paul Antony-Barber is a British actor.

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Paul Beliën

Paul Beliën (born 1959), is a Flemish journalist, author and founder of the conservative blog The Brussels Journal.

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Paul Bew

Paul Anthony Elliott Bew, Baron Bew (born 22 January 1950) is an historian and life peer.

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Paul Dacre

Paul Michael Dacre (born 14 November 1948) is an English journalist and editor of the British newspaper the Daily Mail.

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Paul Hamelius

Paul Hamelius or Hamélius (1868–1922) was a Belgian philologist who produced the two-volume Early English Text Society edition of the Travels of Sir John Mandeville (1919, 1923).

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Paul Jennings (British author)

Paul Francis Jennings (20 June 1918 – 26 December 1989) was an English humourist.

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Paul Johnson (writer)

Paul Bede Johnson (born 2 November 1928) is an English journalist, popular historian, speechwriter, and author.

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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 Sandby

Paul Sandby (1731 – 9 November 1809) was an English map-maker turned landscape painter in watercolours, who, along with his older brother Thomas, became one of the founding members of the Royal Academy in 1768.

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Paul Sussman

Paul Nicholas Sussman (11 July 1966 in Beaconsfield – 31 May 2012 in London) was a best-selling English author, archaeologist and journalist.

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Pauline Pearce

Pauline Pearce is a British Liberal Democrat campaigner and anti-knife crime activist.

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Pépé le Moko

Pépé le Moko is a 1937 French film directed by Julien Duvivier and starring Jean Gabin.

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Péter Erdő

Péter Erdő (Erdő Péter,; born 25 June 1952) is a Hungarian Cardinal of the Latin Rite of the Catholic Church.

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Peadar O'Donnell

Peadar O'Donnell (Peadar Ó Domhnaill; 22 February 1893 – 13 May 1986) was one of the foremost radicals of 20th-century Ireland.

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Peg of Old Drury

Peg of Old Drury is a 1935 British historical film directed by Herbert Wilcox and starring Anna Neagle, Cedric Hardwicke and Margaretta Scott.

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Pelican Books

Pelican Books is a non-fiction imprint of Penguin Books.

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Penelope Chetwode

Penelope Valentine Hester Chetwode, Lady Betjeman (14 February 1910 – 11 April 1986) was an English travel writer.

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Penelope Houston (film critic)

Penelope Houston (9 September 1927 – 26 October 2015) was an English film critic and journal editor.

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Penny Mordaunt

Penelope Mary Mordaunt (born 4 March 1973) is a Conservative politician in the United Kingdom.

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Penny Smith

Penelope Jane Smith (born 21 September 1958) is an English television presenter, newsreader and radio presenter.

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People or Personnel

People or Personnel is a critique of centralized power written by Paul Goodman and published by Random House in 1965.

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People's Pledge

The People's Pledge was a political campaign to secure a referendum on the United Kingdom's membership of the European Union.

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Percy Fawcett

Lieutenant Colonel Percy Harrison Fawcett (18 August 1867during or after 1925) was a British geographer, artillery officer, cartographer, archaeologist and explorer of South America.

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Perdido Street Station

Perdido Street Station is a weird fantasy novel by British writer China Miéville, the first of three independent works set in the fictional world of Bas-Lag, a place where both magic (referred to as 'thaumaturgy') and steampunk technology exist.

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Peregrine Worsthorne

Sir Peregrine Gerard Worsthorne (born 22 December 1923) is a British journalist, writer and broadcaster.

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Perlycross

Perlycross: a tale of the western hills is a three-volume novel by R. D. Blackmore published in 1894.

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Persano horse

The Persano is a horse breed created at the Royal Stud of Persano near Serre in the Italian province of Salerno.

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Peter Ackroyd

Peter Ackroyd, (born 5 October 1949) is an English biographer, novelist and critic with a particular interest in the history and culture of London.

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Peter Brookes

Peter D. Brookes, CBE (born 28 September 1943) is an English cartoonist who has produced work for numerous publications, including Radio Times, New Society, New Statesman, The Spectator, and, most notably, The Times, for which he has been the leader-page cartoonist since 1992.

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Peter Burra

Peter Burra (1909 – 27 April 1937) was a British writer and critic, the author of "The Novels of E. M. Forster".

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Peter Coleman

William Peter Coleman (born 15 December 1928) is an Australian writer and former politician.

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Peter Fleming (writer)

Lieutenant Colonel Robert Peter Fleming (31 May 1907 – 18 August 1971) was a British adventurer, soldier and travel writer.

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Peter Gay

Peter Gay (born Peter Joachim Fröhlich; June 20, 1923 – May 12, 2015) was a German-American historian, educator and author.

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Peter Hitchens

Peter Jonathan Hitchens (born 28 October 1951) is an English journalist and author.

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Peter Hoskin

Peter Hoskin (born 1984) is a British journalist.

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Peter Jenkins (journalist)

Peter George James Jenkins (11 May 1934 – 27 May 1992) was a British journalist and Associate Editor of The Independent.

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Peter Jones (classicist)

Peter Vaughan Jones MBE (1942&ndash) is a Cambridge graduate with a doctorate on Homer.

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Peter Jukes

Peter Jukes is an English author, screenwriter, playwright, literary critic and blogger.

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Peter Kemp (writer)

Peter Mant MacIntyre Kemp (Bombay, 19 August 1913 – London, 30 October 1993), known as Peter Kemp, was an English soldier and writer.

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Peter Kirk (English politician)

Sir Peter Michael Kirk, (18 May 1928 – 17 April 1977) was a British writer, broadcaster, Conservative politician, minister in the governments of Alec Douglas-Home and Edward Heath, and leading European Parliamentarian.

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Peter Martin (professor)

Peter Martin (born 1940) is an American scholar of English literature.

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Peter Millar (journalist)

Peter Millar is a British journalist, critic and author, primarily known for his reporting of the later days of the Cold War and fall of the Berlin Wall.

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Peter Mumford (lighting designer)

Peter Mumford is an international lighting designer who trained at the Central School of Art in London.

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Peter Oborne

Peter Alan Oborne (born 11 July 1957) is a British journalist and broadcaster.

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Peter Stothard

Sir Peter Stothard (born 28 February 1951) is a British author, journalist and critic.

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Peter Vaughan

Peter Vaughan (born Peter Ewart Ohm; 4 April 1923 – 6 December 2016) was a British character actor, known for many supporting roles in British film and television productions.

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Peter Watson (intellectual historian)

Peter Watson (born 1943) is an intellectual historian and former journalist, now perhaps best known for his work in the history of ideas.

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Peterhouse school of history

The Peterhouse School of History was named after the Cambridge college of the same name where the history taught concentrated on 'high politics'.

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Petroc Trelawny

James Edward Petroc Trelawny (born 27 May 1971) is a British classical music radio and television broadcaster, who joined BBC Radio 3 in 1998, where he now presents Breakfast.

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Petronella Wyatt

Petronella "Petsy" Wyatt (born May 1968) is a British journalist and author.

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Philip Bobbitt

Philip Chase Bobbitt (born July 22, 1948) is an American author, academic, and lawyer.

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Philip Davies

Philip Andrew Davies (born 5 January 1972) is a British Conservative Party politician and Member of Parliament (MP) for Shipley in West Yorkshire.

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Philip Delves Broughton

Philip Delves Broughton is a British journalist and author known for his business journalism, such as in his books Ahead of the Curve (2008), and The Art of the Sale (2012).

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Philip Harwood

Philip Harwood (1809–1887) was an English journalist and Unitarian minister, known as the editor of the Saturday Review.

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Philip Hope-Wallace

Philip Adrian Hope-Wallace CBE (6 November 1911 – 3 September 1979) was an English music and theatre critic, whose career was mostly with The Manchester Guardian (later known as The Guardian).

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Philip Howell

Brigadier-General Philip Howell, CMG (7 December 1877 - 7 October 1916) was a senior British Army staff officer during World War I. He was, successively, Brigadier-General, General Staff (BGGS) to the Cavalry Corps under General Allenby (1915), and then BGGS to X Corps under Lt. General Morland (1915).

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Philip Jacobson

Philip Samuel Jacobson (10 September 1938 – 1 January 2018) was a British journalist and war correspondent known for his reporting for The Sunday Times Insight team of the events of Bloody Sunday in Northern Ireland in 1972.

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Philip Larkin

Philip Arthur Larkin (9 August 1922 – 2 December 1985) was an English poet, novelist and librarian.

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Philip MacCann

Philip MacCann is a British author.

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Philip Marsden

Philip Marsden, also known as Philip Marsden-Smedley (born 11 May 1961), is an English travel writer and novelist.

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Philip Womack

Philip Womack (born in 1981) is a British writer and journalist.

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Philip Ziegler

Philip Sandeman Ziegler CVO (born 24 December 1929) is a British biographer and historian.

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Philoumenos (Hasapis) of Jacob's Well

New Martyr Archimandrite Philoumenos (Hasapis) of Jacob's Well (Greek: Φιλούμενος Χασάπης; Φιλούμενος ο Κύπριος; or Φιλούμενος Ορουντιώτης), 15 October 1913 – 29 November 1979, was the Igumen of the Greek Orthodox monastery of Jacob's Well, near the city of Samaria, now called Nablus (Neapolis), in the West Bank.

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Picasso's poetry

Picasso's poetry and other written works created by Pablo Picasso, are often overlooked in discussion of his long and varied career.

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Pierre-Joseph Proudhon (Woodcock biography)

Pierre-Joseph Proudhon is a biography of the French anarchist written by George Woodcock and first published in 1956 by Macmillan.

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Pierre-Paul Prud'hon

Pierre-Paul Prud'hon (April 4, 1758 – February 16, 1823) was a French Romantic painter and draughtsman best known for his allegorical paintings and portraits.

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Pik Botha

Roelof Frederik "Pik" Botha, (born 27 April 1932) is a former politician from South Africa who served as the country's foreign minister in the last years of the apartheid era.

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Pilgrimage (novel sequence)

Pilgrimage is a novel sequence by the British author Dorothy Richardson, from the first half of the 20th century.

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Pippa Middleton

Philippa Charlotte "Pippa" Middleton (born 6 September 1983) is an English socialite, author, and columnist.

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Pittsburgh refrigerator cat

The Pittsburgh Refrigerator Cat, Refrigerator Cat, Cold Storage Cat or Eskimo Cat is repeated as fact in many cat books.

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Play It Again, Sam (play)

Play It Again, Sam is a 1969 Broadway play written by and starring Woody Allen.

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Podcast

A podcast, or generically netcast, is an episodic series of digital audio or video files which a user can download and listen to.

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Poison Pen (film)

Poison Pen is a 1939 film directed by Paul L. Stein, starring Flora Robson, Reginald Tate and Ann Todd.

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Political abuse of psychiatry in the Soviet Union

There was systematic political abuse of psychiatry in the Soviet Union, based on the interpretation of political opposition or dissent as a psychiatric problem.

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Pontefract (UK Parliament constituency)

Pontefract was an English parliamentary constituency centred on the town of Pontefract in the West Riding of Yorkshire, which returned two Members of Parliament to the House of Commons briefly in the 13th century and again from 1621 until 1885, and one member from 1885 to 1974.

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Pope Pius XII

Pope Pius XII (Pio XII), born Eugenio Maria Giuseppe Giovanni Pacelli (2 March 18769 October 1958), was the Pope of the Catholic Church from 2 March 1939 to his death.

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Porky (novel)

Porky, is the fifth novel by the English author Deborah Moggach, first published in 1983 by Jonathan Cape and recommended in OUP's Good Fiction Guide.

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Portland State University

Portland State University (PSU) is a public research university located in the southwest University District of downtown Portland, Oregon, United States.

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Portrait of Mrs. Cecil Wade

Portrait of Mrs.

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Post-truth politics

Post-truth politics (also called post-factual politics and post-reality politics) is a political culture in which debate is framed largely by appeals to emotion disconnected from the details of policy, and by the repeated assertion of talking points to which factual rebuttals are ignored.

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Postcolonial literature

Postcolonial literature is the literature of countries that were colonised, mainly by European countries.

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Posy Simmonds

Rosemary Elizabeth "Posy" Simmonds MBE (born 9 August 1945) is a British newspaper cartoonist and writer and illustrator of children's books.

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Powellism

Powellism is the name given to the political views of Conservative and Ulster Unionist politician Enoch Powell.

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Preparing for a Fancy Dress Ball

Preparing for a Fancy Dress Ball, also known as The Misses Williams-Wynn, is a oil on canvas by English artist William Etty, first exhibited in 1835 and currently in the York Art Gallery.

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Press Holdings

Press Holdings and May Corporation Limited are two Jersey registered holding companies owned by the Barclay brothers, which controls the UK holding company Press Acquisitions Limited, which in turn owns the Telegraph Media Group, parent company of the Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph.

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Press TV controversies

Press TV has been the subject of several controversies.

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Princess Sophia of the United Kingdom

Princess Sophia of the United Kingdom (Sophia Matilda; 3 November 1777 – 27 May 1848) was the twelfth child and fifth daughter of King George III and Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz.

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Private Eye

Private Eye is a British fortnightly satirical and current affairs news magazine, founded in 1961.

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Prolefeed

Prolefeed is a Newspeak term in the novel Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell.

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Proposed cession of the Gambia to France

The proposed cession of the Gambia to France was a political issue in the United Kingdom in the late 19th century.

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Protection of Persons and Property Act 1881

The Protection of Persons and Property (Ireland) Act,The Act had no official short title.

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Protests against SOPA and PIPA

On January 18, 2012, a series of coordinated protests occurred against two proposed laws in the United States Congress—the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and the PROTECT IP Act (PIPA).

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Public Hero No. 1

Public Hero No.

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Pulse (short story collection)

Pulse is the third short story collection written by Julian Barnes.

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Pyramid of Amenemhat III (Dahshur)

The Black Pyramid was built by King Amenemhat III during the Middle Kingdom of Egypt (2055-1650 BC).

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Quarr Abbey

Quarr Abbey (French: Abbaye Notre-Dame de Quarr) is a monastery between the villages of Binstead and Fishbourne on the Isle of Wight in southern England.

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Quartet (Harwood)

Quartet is a play by Ronald Harwood about aging opera singers.

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Quentin Letts

Quentin Richard Stephen Letts (born 6 February 1963) is an English journalist and theatre critic, writing for The Daily Telegraph, Daily Mail, Mail on Sunday, and The Oldie, and previously for The Times.

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Quickening (MacMillan)

Quickening is a cantata for countertenor, two tenors, two baritones, children's choir, chorus, and orchestra by the Scottish composer James MacMillan.

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Quillette

Quillette is an online magazine founded by Australian writer Claire Lehmann.

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Quinlan Terry

John Quinlan Terry CBE (born 24 July 1937 in Hampstead, London, England) is a British architect.

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Quiz (play)

Quiz is a play written by James Graham.

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R v Grillo

R v Elisabetta Grillo and Francesca GrilloR for Regina, Latin for "queen": the Crown Prosecution Service acts in the name of the Crown.

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R v Penguin Books Ltd

R v Penguin Books Ltd was the public prosecution in the UK at the Old Bailey of Penguin Books under the Obscene Publications Act 1959 for the publication of D. H. Lawrence's Lady Chatterley's Lover.

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Rab Butler

Richard Austen Butler, Baron Butler of Saffron Walden, (9 December 1902 – 8 March 1982), generally known as R. A. Butler and familiarly known from his initials as Rab, was a prominent British Conservative politician.

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Race and crime in the United Kingdom

The relationship between race and crime in the United Kingdom is the subject of academic studies, government surveys, media coverage, and public concern.

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Rachel Bradley

Rachel Louise Bradley is a fictional character portrayed by Helen Baxendale in the British comedy-drama television series Cold Feet.

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Rachel Johnson

Rachel Sabiha Johnson (born 3 September 1965) is a British editor, journalist, television presenter, and author based in London.

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Rachel Marsden

Rachel Marsden (born December 2, 1974) is a conservative political columnist, television commentator and university lecturer, originally from Canada but now based in Paris.

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Rachel Whiteread

Rachel Whiteread, CBE (born 20 April 1963) is an English artist who primarily produces sculptures, which typically take the form of casts.

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Radish Tordia

Radish Tordia (რადიშ თორდია) (born August 21, 1936 in Abasha) is a painter of figurative art from Georgia.

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Radosław Sikorski

Radosław Tomasz "Radek" Sikorski (born 23 February 1963) is a Polish politician and journalist.

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Raffaella Barker

Raffaella Flora Barker (born 24 November 1964) is an English author.

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Ragmar

Ragmar (26 March 1993 – after 2012) was a French Thoroughbred racehorse and sire.

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Raja Fashions

Raja Fashions are a bespoke tailor based in Hong Kong with sales operations in other countries.

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Ramsay MacDonald

James Ramsay MacDonald, (né James McDonald Ramsay; 12 October 18669 November 1937) was a British statesman who was the first Labour Party politician to become Prime Minister, leading minority Labour governments in 1924 and in 1929–31.

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Randolph Churchill

Randolph Frederick Edward Spencer-Churchill (28 May 1911 – 6 June 1968) was a British journalist, writer and a Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) for Preston from 1940 to 1945.

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Raymond Carr

Sir (Albert) Raymond Maillard Carr, FBA, FRHS, FRSL (11 April 1919 – 19 April 2015) was an English historian specializing in the history of Spain, Latin America, and Sweden.

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Raymond Chandler bibliography

Raymond Chandler (1888–1959) was an American-British novelist and screenwriter.

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Raymond Keene

Raymond Dennis Keene OBE (born 29 January 1948) is an English chess Grandmaster, a FIDE International Arbiter, a chess organiser, and a journalist and author.

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Rayner Goddard, Baron Goddard

William Edgar Rayner Goddard, Baron Goddard, (10 April 1877 – 29 May 1971) was Lord Chief Justice of England from 1946 to 1958 and known for his strict sentencing and conservative views, despite being the first Lord Chief Justice to be appointed by a Labour government, as well as the first to possess a law degree.

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Rayner Heppenstall

John Rayner Heppenstall (27 July 1911 in Lockwood, Huddersfield, Yorkshire, England – 23 May 1981 in Deal, Kent, England) was a British novelist, poet, diarist, and a BBC radio producer.

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Reading the Comments

Reading the Comments: Likers, Haters, and Manipulators at the Bottom of the Web is a 2015 non-fiction book by Northeastern University professor Joseph M. Reagle Jr..

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Rebecca Fraser

Rebecca Rose Fraser (born May 1957) is a British writer and broadcaster.

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Rebekah Brooks

Rebekah Mary Brooks (née Wade; born 27 May 1968) is a British journalist and former newspaper editor.

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Recessional (poem)

"Recessional" is a poem by Rudyard Kipling.

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Recurring in-jokes in Private Eye

The fortnightly British satirical magazine Private Eye has long had a reputation for using euphemistic and irreverent substitute names and titles for persons, groups and organisations and has coined a number of expressions to describe sex, drugs, alcohol and other aspects of human activity.

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Recycled Orchestra of Cateura

The Recycled Orchestra of Cateura (Orquesta de Instrumentos Reciclados de Cateura.), also known as the Recycled Orchestra, is an orchestra composed of children from the community of Asunción, Paraguay, who play musical instruments made from scrap materials collected from the adjacent landfill site, named Cateura.

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Red brick university

Red brick university (or redbrick university) is a term originally used to refer to nine civic universities founded in the major industrial cities of England in the 19th century, but with the 1960s proliferation of universities and the reclassification of polytechnics in the Further and Higher Education Act 1992, it is sometimes used more broadly to refer to British universities founded in the late 19th and early 20th centuries in major cities.

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Red Salute

Red Salute (also released as Arms and the Girl) is a 1935 American comedy film directed by Sidney Lanfield and starring Barbara Stanwyck and Robert Young.

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Redstone Press

Redstone Press is a London-based art book publisher that was founded in 1986 by Julian Rothenstein, the son of English portrait painter Duffy Ayers and her first husband, the painter and printmaker Michael Rothenstein.

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Reginald Manningham-Buller, 1st Viscount Dilhorne

Reginald Edward Manningham-Buller, 1st Viscount Dilhorne, (1 August 1905 – 7 September 1980), known as Sir Reginald Manningham-Buller, Bt, from 1954 to 1962 and as The Lord Dilhorne from 1962 to 1964, was an English lawyer and Conservative politician.

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Reginald Shirley Brooks

Reginald Shirley Walkinshaw Brooks (October 1854 – 10 May 1888) was an English journalist whose spoof obituary of English cricket gave rise to the legend of The Ashes.

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Reichshund

Reichshund ("dog of the Empire"Henry Vizetelly, Berlin under the New Empire: Its Institutions, Inhabitants, Industry, Monuments, Museums, Social Life, Manners, and Amusements, Volume 1 London: Tinsley, 1879,,.Bryce, p. 126.) was an informal term used in Germany for Reichskanzler Otto von Bismarck's dogs and more generally for similar dogs, particularly Great Danes.

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Republic of Letters

The Republic of Letters (Respublica literaria) is the long-distance intellectual community in the late 17th and 18th centuries in Europe and America.

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Rescue of Jews by Catholics during the Holocaust

During the Holocaust, the Roman Catholic Church played a role in the rescue of hundreds of thousands of Jews from being murdered by the Nazis.

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Resistentialism

Resistentialism is a jocular theory to describe "seemingly spiteful behavior manifested by inanimate objects", where objects that cause problems (like lost keys or a runaway bouncy ball) are said to exhibit a high degree of malice toward humans.

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Respect Party

The Respect Party was a left-wing to far-left political party active in the United Kingdom between 2004 and 2016.

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Restoration literature

Restoration literature is the English literature written during the historical period commonly referred to as the English Restoration (1660–1689), which corresponds to the last years of the direct Stuart reign in England, Scotland, Wales, and Ireland.

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Rhodesian Action Party

The Rhodesian Action Party (RAP) was a political party in Rhodesia formed in 1977 by a group of MPs from the Rhodesian Front (RF) who were dissatisfied by the leadership of Ian Smith and his attempts to negotiate an 'internal settlement' with African nationalists.

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Rian Malan

Rian Malan (born 1954, in Johannesburg) is a South African author, journalist, documentarist and songwriter of Afrikaner descent.

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Richard Bacon (politician)

Richard Michael Bacon (born 3 December 1962, Solihull) is a British Conservative Party politician who has been Member of Parliament (MP) for South Norfolk since 2001.

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Richard Blackmore

Sir Richard Blackmore (22 January 1654 – 9 October 1729), English poet and physician, is remembered primarily as the object of satire and dull poet, but he was also a respected medical doctor and theologian.

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Richard Burton

Richard Burton, CBE (born Richard Walter Jenkins Jr.; 10 November 19255 August 1984) was a Welsh actor.

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Richard Causton (composer)

Richard Causton (born 1971) is an English composer and teacher.

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Richard Cobb

Richard Charles Cobb CBE (20 May 1917 – 15 January 1996) was a British historian and essayist, and professor at the University of Oxford.

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Richard Crossman

Richard Howard Stafford Crossman (15 December 1907 – 5 April 1974), sometimes known as Dick Crossman, was a British Labour Party Member of Parliament, as well as a key figure among the party's Zionists and anti-communists.

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Richard D. North

Richard D. North (born 1946), is a UK conservative commentator.

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Richard Farquhar Scott

Richard Farquhar Scott (16 May 1914 – 11 November 2011) was an English journalist, great-grandson of the founder of ''The Manchester Guardian'' newspaper (later simplified by him to The Guardian), and Chairman of the Scott Trust, its owner.

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Richard Gott

Richard Willoughby Gott (born 28 October 1938, Aston Tirrold, England) is a British journalist and historian.

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Richard Harries, Baron Harries of Pentregarth

Richard Douglas Harries, Baron Harries of Pentregarth, (born 2 June 1936) is a retired bishop of the Church of England and former British Army officer.

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Richard Holt Hutton

Richard Holt Hutton (2 June 1826 – 9 September 1897) was an English journalist of literature and religion.

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Richard Huggett (playwright)

Richard Huggett (born 25 April 1929, London, England, died 15 April 2000 in Surrey, England) was an English actor, author, and playwright.

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Richard Hughes (British writer)

Richard Arthur Warren Hughes OBE (19 April 1900 – 28 April 1976) was a British writer of poems, short stories, novels and plays.

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Richard Ingrams

Richard Reid Ingrams (born 19 August 1937 in Chelsea, London) is an English journalist, a co-founder and second editor of the British satirical magazine Private Eye, and founding editor of The Oldie magazine.

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Richard Littlejohn

Richard Littlejohn (born 18 January 1954) is an English author, broadcaster and a journalist known for his right-wing views.

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Richard Mason (explorer)

Richard Maurice Ledingham Mason (10 April 1934 – 3 September 1961) was an English explorer, and the last Englishman ever to be killed by an uncontacted Amazonian indigenous tribe.

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Richard Mayne (administrator)

Richard John Mayne (2 April 1926 – 29 November 2009) was a British journalist, broadcaster, writer and an advocate for European integration.

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Richard Monckton Milnes, 1st Baron Houghton

Richard Monckton Milnes, 1st Baron Houghton, FRS (19 June 1809 – 11 August 1885) was an English poet, patron of literature and politician.

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Richard Ned Lebow

Richard Ned Lebow, FBA (official date of birth April 24, 1942) is an American political scientist best known for his work in international relations, political psychology, classics and philosophy of science.

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Richard Rovere

Richard Halworth Rovere (May 5, 1915 – November 23, 1979) was an American political journalist.

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Richard Shepherd

Sir Richard Charles Scrimgeour Shepherd (born 6 December 1942) is a Conservative politician in the United Kingdom.

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Richard Shone

Richard Shone (born 1949) is a British art historian and art critic specializing in British modern art, and from 2003–15 was the editor of The Burlington Magazine.

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Richard Vranch

Richard Leslie Vranch (born 29 June 1959, Frome, England) is an English actor, comedian, and musician.

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Richard West (journalist)

Richard West (18 July 1930 – 25 April 2015) was a British journalist and author best known for his reporting of the Vietnam War and Yugoslavia.

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Ricky Wilson (American musician)

Ricky Helton Wilson (March 19, 1953 – October 12, 1985) was an American musician best known as the original guitarist and founding member of rock band the B-52's.

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Riders to the Sea (1936 film)

Riders to the Sea is a British film shot in 1935 in Ireland.

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Riot City: Protest and Rebellion in the Capital

Riot City: Protest and Rebellion in the Capital is a 2012 book by British academic, broadcaster and author, Clive Bloom.

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Ritz Newspaper

Ritz Newspaper, colloquially Ritz Magazine, sometimes simply Ritz, was a British magazine focusing on gossip, celebrity and fashion.

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Robert Bevan

Robert Polhill Bevan (5 August 1865 – 8 July 1925) was a British painter, draughtsman and lithographer.

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Robert Brown (botanist, born 1773)

Robert Brown FRSE FRS FLS MWS (21 December 1773 – 10 June 1858) was a Scottish botanist and palaeobotanist who made important contributions to botany largely through his pioneering use of the microscope.

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Robert Browning

Robert Browning (7 May 1812 – 12 December 1889) was an English poet and playwright whose mastery of the dramatic monologue made him one of the foremost Victorian poets.

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Robert Christison

Sir Robert Christison, 1st Baronet, FRSE FRCSE FRCPE (18 July 1797 – 27 January 1882), was a Scottish toxicologist and physician who served as president of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh (1838–40 and 1846-8) and as president of the British Medical Association (1875).

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Robert Conquest

George Robert Acworth Conquest, CMG, OBE, FBA, FAAAS, FRSL, FBIS (15 July 1917 – 3 August 2015) was an English-American historian, propagandist and poet.

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Robert Egerton Swartwout

Robert Egerton Swartwout (July 2, 1905 – June 2, 1951) was an American-born author, poet, cartoonist, and coxswain.

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Robert Fellowes, Baron Fellowes

Robert Fellowes, Baron Fellowes, (born 11 December 1941) was Private Secretary to Queen Elizabeth II from 1990 to 1999, and is also known as a brother-in-law of Diana, Princess of Wales and first cousin of Ronald Ferguson, the father of Sarah, Duchess of York.

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Robert Fraser (writer)

Robert Fraser FRSL, is a British author and biographer.

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Robert Grainger Ker Thompson

Sir Robert Grainger Ker Thompson KBE CMG DSO MC (1916–1992) was a British military officer and counter-insurgency expert and "He was widely regarded on both sides of the Atlantic as the world's leading expert on countering the Mao Tse-tung technique of rural guerrilla insurgency".

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Robert Halfon

Robert Henry Halfon (born 22 March 1969) is a British Conservative Party politician who served as Minister of State for Education between 2016 and 2017, and as the Member of Parliament (MP) for Harlow since 2010.

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Robert Hughes (critic)

Robert Studley Forrest Hughes AO (28 July 19386 August 2012) was an Australian-born art critic, writer, and producer of television documentaries.

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Robert Kee

Robert Kee, CBE (5 October 1919 – 11 January 2013) was a British broadcaster, journalist and writer, known for his historical works on World War II and Ireland.

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Robert Malcolm Kerr

Mr Commissioner Robert Malcolm Kerr LL.D (5 June 1821–21 November 1902), was a British judge of the late Victorian era.

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Robert Matthews (scientist)

Robert A.J. Matthews (born 23 September 1959), is a British physicist and science writer.

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Robert Mudie

Robert Mudie (1777–1842) was a newspaper editor and author.

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Robert Peston

Robert James Kenneth Peston (born 25 April 1960) is a British journalist, presenter, and founder of the education charity Speakers for Schools.

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Robert Ranulph Marett

Robert Ranulph Marett (13 June 1866 – 18 February 1943) was a British ethnologist.

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Robert Shaw (poet)

Robert (John) Shaw (born 31 July 1933) is a British poet and pioneer of poetry and jazz fusion.

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Robert Spencer (author)

Robert Bruce Spencer (born February 27, 1962) is an American author and blogger and a key figure of the "counter-jihad" movement in the United States.

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Robert Stephen Rintoul

Robert Stephen Rintoul (1787 – 22 April 1858) was a British journalist.

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Robert William Seton-Watson

Robert William Seton-Watson, FBA, FRHistS (London, 20 August 1879 – Skye, 25 July 1951), commonly referred to as R.W. Seton-Watson and also known by the pseudonym Scotus Viator, was a British political activist and historian who played an active role in encouraging the breakup of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the emergence of Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia during and after World War I. He was the father of two eminent historians, Hugh, who specialised in nineteenth-century Russian history, and Christopher, who worked on nineteenth-century Italy.

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Robin Birley (businessman)

Robin Marcus Birley (born 19 February 1958) is an English businessman, entrepreneur and political donor.

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Robin Holloway

Robin Greville Holloway (born 19 October 1943) is an English composer, academic and writer.

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Robin Lane Fox

Robin James Lane Fox, FRSL (born 5 October 1946), is an English classicist, ancient historian and gardening writer known for his works on Alexander the Great.

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Robin Oakley

Robin Francis Leigh Oakley, OBE (born 20 August 1941) in Kidderminster, Worcestershire is a British journalist.

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Rod Liddle

Roderick E. Liddle (born 1 April 1960) is an English journalist and an associate editor of The Spectator.

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Rodney Milnes

Rodney Milnes Blumer OBE (26 July 1936 – 5 December 2015) was an English music critic, musicologist, writer, translator and broadcaster, with a particular interest in opera.

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Roger Alton

Roger Alton (born 20 December 1947 in Oxford) is an English journalist.

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Roger Fuckebythenavele

Roger Fuckebythenavele was a 14th-century Englishman who was cited in court records of 1310–11.

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Roger Gale

Sir Roger James Gale (born 20 August 1943) is a British Conservative politician.

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Roger Kimball

Roger Kimball (born 1953), an American art critic and social commentator, is the editor and publisher of The New Criterion and the publisher of Encounter Books.

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Roger Lewis

Roger Lewis (born 26 February 1960) is a Welsh academic, biographer and journalist.

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Roger Rees

Roger Rees (5 May 1944 – 10 July 2015) was a Welsh actor and director, widely known for his stage work.

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Roger Scruton

Sir Roger Vernon Scruton (born 27 February 1944) is an English philosopher and writer who specialises in aesthetics and political philosophy, particularly in the furtherance of traditionalist conservative views.

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Roger Scruton bibliography

This a list of the published works of English philosopher Roger Scruton.

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Rolfe Arnold Scott-James

Rolfe Arnold Scott-James (1878-1959) was a British journalist, editor and literary critic.

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Rom Landau

Romauld Landau (1899–1974) was born in Poland, but later became a British citizen whilst serving as a volunteer in the Royal Air Force during the Second World War.

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Romeo and Juliet (1936 film)

Romeo and Juliet is a 1936 American film adapted from the play by Shakespeare, directed by George Cukor from a screenplay by Talbot Jennings.

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Romeo and Juliet on screen

William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet may be one of the most-screened plays of all time.

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Romola

Romola (1862–63) is a historical novel by George Eliot set in the fifteenth century, and is "a deep study of life in the city of Florence from an intellectual, artistic, religious, and social point of view".

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Ronald Blythe

Ronald George Blythe, CBE (born 6 November 1922, Debretts. Retrieved 6 November 2012.) is an English writer, essayist and editor, best known for his work Akenfield: Portrait of an English Village (1969), an account of agricultural life in Suffolk from the turn of the century to the 1960s.

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Ronald Harwood

Sir Ronald Harwood, CBE, FRSL (born Ronald Horwitz; 9 November 1934) is an author, playwright and screenwriter.

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Ronald Searle

Ronald William Fordham Searle, CBE, RDI (3 March 1920 – 30 December 2011) was a British artist and satirical cartoonist.

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Ronald Watkins

Arthur Ronald Dare Watkins (29 August 1904 – 16 February 2001)Harrow School Register 2002 8th edition edited by S W Bellringer & published by The Harrow Association was a teacher of drama and a director, noted for his work on Shakespeare and was awarded the Order of the British Empire.

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Ronchini Gallery

Ronchini Gallery was founded by Lorenzo Ronchini in Umbria, Italy in 1992, and moved to Mayfair, London in February 2012.

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Rongotai (New Zealand electorate)

Rongotai is a New Zealand electorate, returning a single member to the New Zealand House of Representatives.

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Ronnie Corbett

Ronald Balfour Corbett, CBE (4 December 1930 – 31 March 2016) was a Scottish stand-up comedian, actor, writer, and broadcaster, best known for his long association with Ronnie Barker in the BBC television comedy sketch show The Two Ronnies.

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Ronnie O'Sullivan

Ronald Antonio O'Sullivan, (born 5 December 1975) is an English professional snooker player.

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Rory McEwen (artist)

Roderick McEwen or Rory McEwen (12 March 1932 – 16 October 1982) was a Scottish artist and musician.

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Rory Sutherland (advertising)

Rory Sutherland (born 1965, Usk, Monmouthshire, Wales) is a British advertising executive.

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Rosa Brett

Rosa Brett (7 December 1829 – 31 January 1882), was a Pre-Raphaelite painter and sister of landscape artist John Brett.

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Rosa Monckton

The Honourable Rosamond Mary Monckton, married name Rosamond Mary Lawson, (born 26 October 1953 in Westminster, London) is an English business woman and charity campaigner, usually known as Rosa Monckton.

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Rose Prince (writer)

Rose Prince (born 4 December 1962) is a food writer, author, cook and activist.

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Rosie Kane

Rosemary "Rosie" Kane (née McGarvey) (born on 5 June 1961 in Glasgow) is a Scottish Socialist Party politician, and former Member of the Scottish Parliament for the Glasgow Region.

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Ross Clark (journalist)

Ross Clark (born 12 September 1966) is a British journalist and author whose work has appeared in The Spectator, The Times and other publications.

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Roxburghshire (UK Parliament constituency)

Roxburghshire was a county constituency of the House of Commons of the Parliament of Great Britain (at Westminster) from 1708 to 1801, and of the Parliament of the United Kingdom (also at Westminster) from 1801 to 1918.

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Roy Hattersley

Roy Sydney George Hattersley, Baron Hattersley, PC, FRSL (born 28 December 1932) is a British Labour politician, author and journalist from Sheffield.

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Royal baccarat scandal

The royal baccarat scandal, also known as the Tranby Croft affair, was a British gambling scandal of the late 19th century involving the Prince of Wales—the future King Edward VII.

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RSC production of A Midsummer Night's Dream (1970)

The 1970 Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) production of A Midsummer Night's Dream was directed by Peter Brook, and is often known simply as Peter Brook's Dream. It opened in the Royal Shakespeare Theatre at Stratford-upon-Avon and then moved to the Aldwych Theatre in London's West End in 1971.

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RT (TV network)

RT (formerly Russia Today) is a Russian international television network funded by the Russian government.

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Ruby Ferguson

Ruby Constance Annie Ferguson (née Ashby; 28 July 1899 – 11 November 1966), was a British writer of popular fiction, including children's books, romances, and mysteries.

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Rudolf Peierls

Sir Rudolf Ernst Peierls, (5 June 1907 – 19 September 1995) was a German-born British physicist who played a major role in the Manhattan Project and Tube Alloys, Britain's nuclear programme.

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Rugby, Tennessee

Rugby is an unincorporated community in Morgan and Scott counties in the U.S. state of Tennessee.

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Rupa Huq

Rupa Asha Huq (রাবেয়া "রূপা" আশা হক; born 2 April 1972) is a British Labour Party politician, columnist, academic and DJ.

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Rupert Christiansen

Rupert Christiansen (born 1954) is an English writer, journalist and critic.

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Rupert Hambro

Rupert Nicholas Hambro CBE (born 1943) is a British heir, banker, businessman and philanthropist.

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Ruth Archer

Ruth Archer (also Pritchard) is a fictional character from the British BBC Radio 4 soap opera The Archers, played by English actress Felicity Finch.

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S. Rajaratnam

Sinnathamby Rajaratnam (Tamil: சின்னத்தம்பி ராஜரட்ணம்),, (25 February 1915 – 22 February 2006), was a Deputy Prime Minister of Singapore from 1980–85, a long-serving Minister and member of the Cabinet from 1959–88 and a short story writer.

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Sacred Country

Sacred Country is a novel by English author Rose Tremain, it was published in 1992 by Sinclair Stevenson and won both the James Tait Black Memorial Prize and Prix Femina Etranger.

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Saddam Hussein's alleged shredder

In the runup to the 2003 Invasion of Iraq, press stories appeared in the United Kingdom and United States of a plastic shredder or wood chipper into which Saddam and Qusay Hussein fed opponents of their Baathist rule.

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Sadiq Khan

Sadiq Aman Khan (born 8 October 1970) is a British politician serving as Mayor of London since 2016.

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Sajid Javid

Sajid Javid (born 5 December 1969) is a British Conservative Party politician and former managing director at Deutsche Bank.

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Sally Artz

Sally Artz is a British cartoonist and illustrator, whose work has been featured in many publications including Punch, Private Eye, Reader’s Digest, The Spectator, the Mail on Sunday and the Daily Mirror.

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Sam Gyimah

Samuel Phillip Gyimah (born 10 August 1976) is a Conservative politician who has served as the Member of Parliament (MP) for East Surrey since the 2010 general election.

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Sam Kiley

Sam Kiley (born 1964), is a Senior International Correspondent at CNN.

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Sam Leith

Sam Leith (born 1 January 1974 in Paddington, London) is an English author, journalist and literary editor of The Spectator.

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Same-Sex Unions in Pre-Modern Europe

Same-Sex Unions in Pre-Modern Europe (UK title; The Marriage of Likeness: Same-Sex Unions in Pre-Modern EuropeHalsall 2007) is a historical study written by American historian John Boswell and first published by Villard Books in 1994.

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Samira Ahmed

Samira Ahmed (born 15 June 1968, London) is a British freelance journalist, writer and broadcaster at the BBC, where she has presented Radio 4's PM, The World Tonight, Sunday and Front Row.

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Samuel Kerkham Ratcliffe

Samuel Kerkham Ratcliffe (1868-1958) was an English journalist and lecturer.

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Samuel Nicholson (merchant)

Samuel Nicholson (1738–1827) was a London wholesale haberdasher, known as a Unitarian and associate of radicals.

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Samuil Ronin

Samuil Lazarevič Ronin (1894–?) was a Russian social scientist.

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Santa Montefiore

Santa Montefiore (née Palmer-Tomkinson; born 2 February 1970) is a British author.

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Sarah Churchwell

Sarah Bartlett Churchwell (born 1970) is a professor of American Literature and Public Understanding of the Humanities at the University of London, UK.

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Sarah Pitt

Sarah Pitt was a nineteenth century children's author.

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Sarah Wollaston

Sarah Wollaston (born 17 February 1962) is a British Conservative Party politician.

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Sarfraz Manzoor

Sarfraz Manzoor (سرفراز منظور; born 9 June 1971) is a British journalist, documentary maker, and broadcaster.

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Scarborough, North Yorkshire

Scarborough is a town on the North Sea coast of North Yorkshire, England.

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Scotland's Future

Scotland's Future is a government white paper published on 26 November 2013 by the Scottish Government under First Minister Alex Salmond.

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Scottish independence

Scottish independence (Scots unthirldom; Neo-eisimeileachd na h-Alba) is a political aim of various political parties, advocacy groups, and individuals in Scotland (which is a country of the United Kingdom) for the country to become an independent sovereign state.

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Sean O'Callaghan

Sean O'Callaghan (26 January 1954 – 23 August 2017) was a member of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA).

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Sebastian Barker

Sebastian Smart Barker FRSL (16 April 1945 – 31 January 2014) was a British poet notable for a visionary manner that has been compared to William Blake in its use of the long ecstatic line and its "ability to write lyric poetry which used simple words to encapsulate profound meanings".

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Sebastian Smee

Sebastian Smee is an art critic for the Washington Post.

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Secrets of the Super Psychics

Secrets of the Super Psychics was a Channel 4 documentary special in the UK, first shown in the ''Equinox'' strand in 1997, later reformatted as a shorter The Learning Channel episode in 1998: "Viewers eager to know more about the differences between science and claptrap should tune in".

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Seduced and Abandoned (2013 film)

Seduced and Abandoned is a 2013 documentary film directed by James Toback.

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Selina Hastings (writer)

Selina Shirley Hastings (born 5 March 1945) is a British journalist, author and biographer.

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Senior Wrangler (University of Cambridge)

The Senior Wrangler is the top mathematics undergraduate at Cambridge University in England, a position which has been described as "the greatest intellectual achievement attainable in Britain." Specifically, it is the person who achieves the highest overall mark among the Wranglers – the students at Cambridge who gain first-class degrees in mathematics.

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Sergei Magnitsky

Sergei Leonidovich Magnitsky (Серге́й Леони́дович Магни́тский; 8 April 1972 – 16 November 2009) was a Russian tax accountant who specialized in anti-corruption activities.

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Sergey Nalobin

Sergey Nalobin is a Russian diplomat and the founder in the United Kingdom in 2012 of the Conservative Friends of Russia.

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Seumas Milne

Seumas Milne (born 1958) is a British journalist and political aide.

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Sexual Desire (book)

Sexual Desire: A Philosophical Investigation, published as Sexual Desire: A Moral Philosophy of the Erotic in the United States, is a 1986 book about the philosophy of sex by the philosopher Roger Scruton, in which the author discusses sexual desire and erotic love, arguing against the idea that the former expresses the animal part of human nature while the latter is an expression of its rational side.

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Seymour Expedition

The Seymour Expedition was an attempt by a multi-national military force to march to Beijing and protect the diplomatic legations and foreign nationals in the city from attacks by Boxers in 1900.

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Shabana Mahmood

Shabana Mahmood (شبانہ محمود; born 17 September 1980) is a British Labour Party politician and barrister, Retrieved 7 December 2011 who has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for Birmingham, Ladywood since the May 2010 general election.

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Shakeel Begg

Shakeel Begg is a prominent British Muslim, notable for losing a court case in which he challenged the BBC's description of him as an extremist.

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Shakespeare in Love

Shakespeare in Love is a 1998 American romantic period comedy-drama film directed by John Madden, written by Marc Norman and playwright Tom Stoppard.

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Sharon Horgan

Sharon Lorencia Horgan (born 13 July 1970) is an Irish actress, writer, and producer, based in London.

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She (1935 film)

She is a 1935 American film produced by Merian C. Cooper.

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Sheep may safely graze

Sheep May Safely Graze (German: Schafe können sicher weiden) is a soprano aria by Johann Sebastian Bach setting words by Salomon Franck.

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Sheikh Jarrah

Sheikh Jarrah (الشيخ جراح, שייח' ג'ראח) is a predominantly Palestinian neighborhood in East Jerusalem, 2 kilometers north of the Old City, on the road to Mount Scopus.

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Sheridan Morley

Sheridan Morley (5 December 1941, Ascot, Berkshire − 16 February 2007, London) was an English author, biographer, critic and broadcaster.

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Shirley Abicair

Shirley Abicair (born 26 October 1928) is an Australian-born singer, musician, TV personality, actress and author.

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Shirley Porter

Dame Shirley Porter, Lady Porter DBE (née Cohen; born 29 November 1930) is a British politician who led Westminster City Council in London representing the Conservative Party.

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Shiva Naipaul

Shiva Naipaul (25 February 1945 – 13 August 1985), born Shivadhar Srinivasa Naipaul in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, was a Trinidadian and British novelist and journalist.

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Shopped

Shopped: The Shocking Power Of British Supermarkets is a book by British author and investigative journalist Joanna Blythman first published by Fourth Estate in 2004.

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Siân Evans

Siân Evans is an historical author, journalist, and film consultant, known for her guidebooks for the National Trust, of which she has written seven, and her works of social and cultural history.

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Siôn Simon

Siôn Llewelyn Simon (born 23 December 1968) is a British Labour Party politician who has been a Member of the European Parliament (MEP) for the West Midlands since 2014.

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Sibyl, Lady Colefax

Sibyl, Lady Colefax (née Halsey; 1874 – 22 September 1950) was a notable English interior decorator and socialite in the first half of the twentieth century.

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Sicilian Defence

The Sicilian Defence is a chess opening that begins with the following moves: The Sicilian is the most popular and best-scoring response to White's first move 1.e4.

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Siddhartha Mukherjee

Siddhartha Mukherjee (born 21 July 1970) is an Indian-American physician, biologist, oncologist, and author.

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Silvio Berlusconi

Silvio Berlusconi (born 29 September 1936) is an Italian media tycoon and politician who has served as Prime Minister of Italy in four governments.

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Simi Bedford

Simi Bedford is a Nigerian novelist based in Britain.

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Simla Accord (1914)

The Simla Accord, or the Convention Between Great Britain, China, and Tibet, Simla,, Tibet Justice Center.

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Simon Barnes

Simon Barnes is an English journalist.

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Simon Cottee

Simon Cottee is an academic who works as a senior lecturer in criminology at the University of Kent, and is a regular contributor to The Atlantic.

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Simon Dormandy

Simon Dormandy is an English theatre director, teacher and actor.

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Simon Gray

Simon James Holliday Gray, CBE (21 October 1936 – 7 August 2008) was an English playwright and memoirist who also had a career as a university lecturer in English literature at Queen Mary, University of London, for 20 years.

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Simon Heffer

Simon James Heffer (born 18 July 1960) is an English historian, journalist, author and political commentator.

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Simon Hoggart

Simon David Hoggart (26 May 1946 – 5 January 2014) was an English journalist and broadcaster.

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Simon Jenkins

Sir Simon David Jenkins (born 10 June 1943) is a British author and newspaper columnist and editor.

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Simon Keenlyside

Sir Simon Keenlyside CBE (born 3 August 1959) is a British baritone who has had an active international career performing in operas and concerts since the mid-1980s.

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Simon Langton Grammar School for Boys

Simon Langton Grammar School for Boys is a school of over 1300 pupils and staff, located on the outskirts of Canterbury, Kent.

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Simon Schama

Sir Simon Michael Schama, CBE, FRSL, FBA (born 13 February 1945) is an English historian specialising in art history, Dutch history, and French history.

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Simon Sebag Montefiore

Simon Jonathan Sebag Montefiore (born 27 June 1965) is a British historian, television presenter and award-winning author of popular history books and novels.

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Singing Together (radio)

Singing Together was a BBC Radio schools series which ran from 25 September 1939 to 29 March 2001, with repeats until 25 June 2004.

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Sir Edward Strachey, 3rd Baronet

Sir Edward Strachey, 3rd Baronet (1812–1901) was an English man of letters.

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Sir George Robinson, 2nd Baronet

Sir George Best Robinson, 2nd Baronet (14November 17971855) was a British colonial administrator who became Chief Superintendent of British trade in China.

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Sir Henry Bellingham, 4th Baronet

Sir Alan Henry Bellingham, 4th Baronet, (23 August 1846 – 9 June 1921) was an Anglo-Irish Conservative Member of Parliament.

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Sir Richard Paget, 2nd Baronet

Sir Richard Arthur Surtees Paget, 2nd Baronet (13 January 1869 – 23 October 1955) was a British barrister and amateur scientific investigator, who specialised in speech science and the origin of speech.

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Sir Thomas Lethbridge, 2nd Baronet

Sir Thomas Buckler Lethbridge (1778–1849) was an English politician, the second of the Lethbridge baronets.

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Sixpenny Library

Ernest Benn Limited’s Sixpenny Library is a complete series of reference books published in the late 1920s and early 1930s.

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Small g: a Summer Idyll

Small g: a Summer Idyll (1995) is the final novel by American writer Patricia Highsmith.

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Snowflake (slang)

Snowflake as a slang term involves the derogatory usage of the word snowflake to refer to a person.

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So (sentence opener)

So is an English word that, apart from its other uses, has become increasingly popular in recent years as a coordinating conjunctive opening word in a sentence.

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Social class in the United Kingdom

The social structure of the United Kingdom has historically been highly influenced by the concept of social class, with the concept still affecting British society today.

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Socialist Action (UK)

Socialist Action is a small Trotskyist group in the United Kingdom.

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Society of Women Artists

The Society of Women Artists (SWA) is a British art body dedicated to celebrating and promoting fine art created by women.

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Sockl and Nathan

Sockl and Nathan were a 19th-century British greeting card and publishing company with headquarters in London.

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Solly Zuckerman, Baron Zuckerman

Solly Zuckerman, Baron Zuckerman (30 May 1904 – 1 April 1993) was a British public servant, zoologist and operational research pioneer.

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Solo (Boyd novel)

Solo is a James Bond continuation novel written by William Boyd.

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Sonia Orwell

Sonia Mary Brownell (25 August 1918 – 11 December 1980), better known as Sonia Orwell, was the second and last wife of writer George Orwell, whose real name was Eric Arthur Blair.

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Sophia Dobson Collet

Sophia Dobson Collet (1 February 1822 – 27 March 1894) was a 19th-century English feminist freethinker.

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Sousa Jamba

Sousa Jamba (born 9 January 1966), Africa Confidential.

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South Africa Conciliation Committee

The South Africa Conciliation Committee was a British anti-war organisation opposed to the Second Boer War.

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South African Broadcasting Corporation

The South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) is the state broadcaster in South Africa, and provides 19 radio stations (AM/FM) as well as 5 television broadcasts to the general public.

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South Pacific (musical)

South Pacific is a musical composed by Richard Rodgers, with lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II and book by Hammerstein and Joshua Logan.

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Soviet dissidents

Soviet dissidents were people who disagreed with certain features in the embodiment of Soviet ideology and who were willing to speak out against them.

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Speaking and Language

Speaking and Language: Defence of Poetry is a book of criticism by Paul Goodman that blames academic, structured approaches to linguistics for diminishing the role of creativity and spontaneity in speaking and human nature.

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Special Relationship

The Special Relationship is an unofficial term for the political, diplomatic, cultural, economic, military, and historical relations between the United Kingdom and the United States.

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Spectator

Spectator or The Spectator may refer to.

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Spice Up Your Life

"Spice Up Your Life" is a song by the British pop group Spice Girls.

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Spirit of Eden

Spirit of Eden is the fourth studio album by English band Talk Talk, released in 1988 on Parlophone Records.

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Spoilt Rotten

Spoilt Rotten: The Toxic Cult of Sentimentality (subtitle in US editions: How Britain is Ruined by Its Children) is a non-fiction book by the British writer and retired doctor and psychiatrist Theodore Dalrymple, originally published in 2010.

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Springhaven

Springhaven: a tale of the Great War is a three-volume novel by R. D. Blackmore published in 1887.

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Squadron 992

Squadron 992 is a 23-minute 1940 British propaganda film produced by the General Post Office GPO Film Unit of the Ministry of Information and re-distributed by the National Film Board of Canada (NFB) as part of their wartime Canada Carries On series.

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St Benedict's School, Ealing

St Benedict's School, usually referred to as St Benedict's, is a British co-educational independent Roman Catholic day school situated in Ealing, West London.

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St Catherine's School, Bramley

St Catherine's School is an independent girls' school in the village of Bramley, near Guildford, Surrey, England.

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St Dunstan's College

St Dunstan's College (SDC) is a co-educational independent school in Catford, London, England.

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St George's School, Windsor Castle

St George's School, Windsor Castle is a coeducational independent preparatory school in Windsor, near London, England.

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St James Garlickhythe

St.

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St Ninian's School, Moffat

St Ninian's Preparatory School was an independent preparatory school for boys in Moffat, Scotland.

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St Philip's Church, Hove

St Philip's Church is a Church of England parish church in Hove, in the city of Brighton and Hove, England.

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Stan Gebler Davies

Stanley Gebler Davies (Dublin, 16 July 1943 - Dalkey, Ireland, 23 June 1994) was an Irish journalist with the Irish Independent as well as with various British magazines (including Punch, The Evening Standard, The Daily Telegraph and The Spectator).

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Stanley Baldwin

Stanley Baldwin, 1st Earl Baldwin of Bewdley, (3 August 186714 December 1947) was a British statesman of the Conservative Party who dominated the government in his country between the world wars.

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Star of Midnight

Star of Midnight is a 1935 American mystery-comedy film directed by Stephen Roberts and James Anderson.

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Star Wheel Press

Star Wheel Press are an indie/folk/pop band from Aberfeldy, Scotland.

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State collapse

State collapse, breakdown, or downfall is the complete failure of a mode of government within a sovereign state.

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State-sponsored terrorism

State-sponsored terrorism is government support of violent non-state actors engaged in terrorism.

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Station X (TV documentary)

Station X, was a 1999 UK Channel 4 documentary series detailing the story of how the Germany's Enigma code was broken.

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Stefan Themerson

Stefan Themerson (25 January 1910 – 6 September 1988) was a Polish, later British poet, novelist, filmmaker, composer and philosopher.

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Stella Creasy

Stella Judith Creasy (born 5 April 1977) is a British Labour and Co-operative politician, who has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for the London constituency of Walthamstow since the 2010 general election.

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Stephen Crabb

Stephen Crabb (born 20 January 1973) is a British politician of the Conservative Party serving as the Member of Parliament (MP) for Preseli Pembrokeshire since the 2005 general election.

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Stephen Duck

Stephen Duck (c. 1705 – 1756) was an English poet whose career reflected both the Augustan era's interest in "naturals" (natural geniuses) and its resistance to classlessness.

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Stephen Gardiner (architect)

Stephen Gardiner (25 April 1924 – 15 February 2007) was a British architect, teacher and writer.

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Stephen Glover

Stephen Glover (born 13 January 1952) is a British journalist and columnist for the Daily Mail.

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Stephen Phillips

Stephen Phillips (28 July 1864 – 9 December 1915) was an English poet and dramatist, who enjoyed considerable popularity early in his career.

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Steve Bannon

Stephen Kevin Bannon (born November 27, 1953) is an American media executive, political figure, former investment banker, and the former executive chairman of Breitbart News.

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Stig Abell

Stephen "Stig" Paul Abell (born 10 April 1980) is an English journalist, newspaper editor and radio presenter.

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Stop Funding Hate

Stop Funding Hate is a social media campaign which aims to stop companies from advertising in, and thus providing funds for, certain British newspapers that it argues use "fear and division to sell more papers".

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Streisand effect

The Streisand effect is a phenomenon whereby an attempt to hide, remove, or censor a piece of information has the unintended consequence of publicizing the information more widely, usually facilitated by the Internet.

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Stryker McGuire

Stryker McGuire (born September 12, 1947) is a journalist working in London.

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Stuart Reid (English journalist)

Stuart Reid (born 1943, Bradford, Yorkshire) is an English writer and editor.

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Style (book)

F. L. Lucas's Style (1955) is a book about the writing and appreciation of "good prose", expanded for the general reader from lectures originally given to English Literature students at Cambridge University.

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Suez Crisis

The Suez Crisis, or the Second Arab–Israeli War, also named the Tripartite Aggression (in the Arab world) and Operation Kadesh or Sinai War (in Israel),Also named: Suez Canal Crisis, Suez War, Suez–Sinai war, Suez Campaign, Sinai Campaign, Operation Musketeer (أزمة السويس /‎ العدوان الثلاثي, "Suez Crisis"/ "the Tripartite Aggression"; Crise du canal de Suez; מבצע קדש "Operation Kadesh", or מלחמת סיני, "Sinai War") was an invasion of Egypt in late 1956 by Israel, followed by the United Kingdom and France.

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Suketu Mehta

Suketu Mehta (born 1963) is a writer based in New York City.

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Summerhill (book)

Summerhill: A Radical Approach to Child Rearing is a book about the English boarding school Summerhill School by its headmaster A. S. Neill.

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Sun-Times Media Group

Sun-Times Media Group (formerly Hollinger International) is a Chicago-based newspaper publisher.

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Sunday Business

Sunday Business was a national Sunday broadsheet financial newspaper published in the United Kingdom, which ran from 1996 to 2006, when it was turned into a magazine called The Business.

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Sunday Sport

Sunday Sport is a British tabloid newspaper, published by Sport Newspapers, which was originally established in 1986.

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Superman

Superman is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

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Supremely Partisan

Supremely Partisan: How Raw Politics Tips the Scales in the United States Supreme Court is a non-fiction book by James D. Zirin published by Rowman & Littlefield on September 15, 2016.

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Susan Crosland

Susan Barnes Crosland (23 January 1927 – 26 February 2011), Daily Telegraph 28 February 2011 was an American journalist and novelist who was resident in London for more than fifty years.

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Susan Eisenhower

Susan Elaine Eisenhower (born December 31, 1951) is a consultant, author, and expert on international security, space policy, energy, and relations between the Russian Federation and the United States of America.

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Susanna Gross

Susanna Gross (born 1968 or 1969) has been literary editor of The Mail on Sunday since 1999.

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Suzannah Lipscomb

Suzannah Rebecca Gabriella Lipscomb (born 7 December 1978, Library of Congress Name Authority File in Sutton, London) is a British historian, academic and television presenter who has written and appeared in a number of television and radio programmes about British history.

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Sweet Caress

Sweet Caress: The Many Lives of Amory Clay is a novel by William Boyd, published by Bloomsbury in 2015.

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Sylvia Plath

Sylvia Plath (October 27, 1932 – February 11, 1963) was an American poet, novelist, and short-story writer.

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Sylvia Rothschild

Sylvia Rothschild (born 21 November 1957) is a British Reform rabbi.

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T. E. Utley

Thomas Edwin 'Peter' Utley CBE (1 February 1921 – 21 June 1988) was a British High Tory journalist and writer.

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Tachypous

Tachypous (foaled 1974) was a British Thoroughbred racehorse and sire.

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Tahir Shah

Tahir Shah (طاهر شاه, તાહિર શાહ; né Sayyid Tahir al-Hashimi (Arabic: سيد طاهر الهاشمي); born 16 November 1966) is a British author, journalist and documentary maker of Afghan-Indian descent.

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Tahu Hole

Tahu Ronald Charles Pearce Hole CBE (29 March 1906 – 22 November 1985) was a New Zealand born journalist who was the BBC's television news editor during the period immediately following the Second World War.

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Taki Theodoracopulos

Panagiotis "Taki" Theodoracopulos (text; born 11 August 1936) is a Greek journalist and writer.

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Talk of the Town (magazine)

Talk of the Town was a short-lived quality arts supplement distributed with London copies of the UK Independent on Sunday newspaper from 2003 to 2004.

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Tanveer Ahmed (psychiatrist)

Tanveer Ahmed (born 1975) is a Bangladeshi born Australian psychiatrist, journalist and television presenter.

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Tanya Gold

Tanya Gold (born 31 December 1973 in Merton, Surrey) is an English journalist.

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Tara Palmer-Tomkinson

Tara Claire Palmer-Tomkinson (23 December 1971 – 8 February 2017), also known as T P-T, was an English socialite and television personality.

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Tariq Ramadan

Tariq Ramadan (طارق رمضان; born 26 August 1962) is a Swiss Muslim academic, philosopher, and writer.

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Tauck

Tauck is an operator of guided tours and cruises on rivers.

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Tête à Tête (opera company)

Tête à Tête is a London-based opera company that commissions new works.

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Techno

Techno is a form of electronic dance music that emerged in Detroit, Michigan, in the United States during the mid-to-late 1980s.

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Tehzeeb-ul-Akhlaq

Tehzeeb-ul-Ikhlaq was a journal published by the Muslim reformer Sir Syed Ahmed Khan between 1871 and 1897.

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Television in South Africa

Television in South Africa was introduced in 1976.

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Terence Stamp

Terence Henry Stamp (born 22 July 1938) is an English actor.

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Teresa Hayter

Teresa Hayter (born 1940) is a British author and activist.

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Thatched House Lodge

Thatched House Lodge is a Grade II-listed building, dating from the 17th century, in Richmond Park in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames in London, England.

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The Aachen Memorandum

The Aachen Memorandum is a 1995 thriller novel by Andrew Roberts.

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The Abolition of Britain

The Abolition of Britain: From Lady Chatterley to Tony Blair (US subtitle: From Winston Churchill to Princess Diana) is the first book by British conservative journalist Peter Hitchens, published in 1999.

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The Adventures of Barry McKenzie

The Adventures of Barry McKenzie is a 1972 Australian film starring Barry Crocker, telling the story of an Australian 'yobbo' on his travels to the United Kingdom.

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The Adventures of Philip

The Adventures of Philip on his Way Through the World: Shewing Who Robbed Him, Who Helped Him, and Who Passed Him By (1861–62) is a novel by William Makepeace Thackeray.

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The Age of Uncertainty

The Age of Uncertainty is a 1977 book and television series, co-produced by the BBC, CBC, KCET and OECA, and written and presented by Harvard economist John Kenneth Galbraith.

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The Allure of Chanel

The Allure of Chanel are the memoirs of the French fashion designer Coco Chanel, told to her friend Paul Morand.

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The American Spectator

The American Spectator is a conservative U.S. monthly magazine covering news and politics, edited by R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. and published by the non-profit American Spectator Foundation.

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The Anti-Death League

The Anti-Death League is a 1966 novel by English author Kingsley Amis (1922-1995).

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The Arbuturian

The Arbuturian is a daily online magazine covering food and drink, arts and culture, exotic travel and luxury living.

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The Armourer of Nantes

The Armourer of Nantes is an opera in three acts, with music by Michael William Balfe and libretto by J. V. Bridgman.

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The Aryan Path

The Aryan Path was an Anglo-Indian theosophical journal published in Bombay, India, between 1930 and 1960.

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The Australian Moment

The Australian Moment: How We Were Made For These Times is a 2012 Australian economics book by George Megalogenis.

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The Bad Seed

The Bad Seed is a 1954 novel by American writer William March, the last of his major works published before his death.

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The Bat (play)

The Bat is a three-act play by Mary Roberts Rinehart and Avery Hopwood that was first produced by Lincoln Wagenhals and Collin Kemper in 1920.

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The Beacon (novel)

The Beacon, is a novel by English author Susan Hill, first published in 2008 by Chatto and Windus and in paperback the following year by Vintage Books.

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The Bear Dances

The Bear Dances: A Play in Three Acts is a political drama about the Soviet Union set in 1930, written by British playwright F. L. Lucas in 1931, and first staged in 1932.

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The Beatles' 1964 world tour

The Beatles 1964 world tour was The Beatles first world tour, launched after their 1964 UK tour.

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The Believers (novel)

The Believers is a novel by Zoë Heller first published in 2008.

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The Bell (novel)

The Bell is a novel by Iris Murdoch.

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The Belton Estate

The Belton Estate is a novel by Anthony Trollope, written in 1865.

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The Better Angels of Our Nature

The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined is a 2011 book by Steven Pinker, in which the author argues that violence in the world has declined both in the long run and in the short run and suggests explanations as to why this has occurred.

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The Black Cloud

The Black Cloud is a science fiction novel by British astrophysicist Fred Hoyle.

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The Black Robe

The Black Robe is an 1881 epistolary novel by famed English writer, Wilkie Collins.

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The Black Room (1935 film)

The Black Room is a 1935 mystery-horror film, directed by Roy William Neill.

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The Bloomsbury Cookbook

The Bloomsbury Cookbook: Recipes for Life, Love and Art is a 2014 book by British author Jans Ondaatje Rolls, published by Thames & Hudson.

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The Boat Race 1925

The 77th Boat Race took place on 28 March 1925.

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The Boat Race 2013

The 159th Boat Race between crews from the University of Oxford and the University of Cambridge took place on 31 March 2013.

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The Boat Races 2016

The 2016 Boat Races (also known as The Cancer Research UK Boat Races for the purposes of sponsorship) took place on 27 March 2016.

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The Boy I Love is Up in the Gallery

"The Boy I Love Is Up in the Gallery" is a music hall song written in 1885 by George Ware for music hall star Nelly Power, and made famous by Marie Lloyd.

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The Boy Who Taught the Beekeeper to Read

The Boy Who Taught the Beekeeper to Read is a short story collection by British writer Susan Hill published in 2003 by Chatto & Windus (hardback) and the following year in paperback by Vintage Books.

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The Bridge: The Life and Rise of Barack Obama

The Bridge: The Life and Rise of Barack Obama is a 2010 biography of Barack Obama, written by journalist David Remnick.

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The British Edda

The British Edda is a 1930 English, Sumerian and Egyptian linguistics and mythology book written by Laurence Waddell about the adventures of El, Wodan and Loki forming an Eden Triad in the Garden of Eden.

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The Burning Glass

The Burning Glass is a 1954 dramatic play by Charles Morgan.

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The Canary (website)

The Canary is a left-wing new media outlet in the United Kingdom, which editor-in-chief Kerry-Anne Mendoza says is "here to disrupt the status quo of the UK and international journalism, by creating content that compels audiences to view the world differently".

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The Car Man (Bourne)

Matthew Bourne's The Car Man is a dance production by British choreographer Matthew Bourne.

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The Case of Thomas N.

The Case of Thomas N. (1987) is a novel by John David Morley.

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The Children Act (novel)

The Children Act is a novel by the English writer Ian McEwan, published on 2 September 2014.

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The Christmas Tree (novel)

The Christmas Tree is Irish author Jennifer Johnston's sixth novel, first published in 1981 by Hamish Hamilton.

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The Churchill Arms

The Churchill Arms is a public house at 119 Kensington Church Street on the corner with Campden Street, Notting Hill, London.

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The City & the City

The City & the City is a novel by British author China Miéville, combining weird fiction with the police procedural.

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The Claverings

The Claverings is a novel by Anthony Trollope, written in 1864 and published in 1866–67.

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The Con Artist

The Con Artist is a 2010 romantic comedy film directed by Risa Bramon Garcia and written by Michael Melski and Collin Friesen, starring Rossif Sutherland, Rebecca Romijn, Sarah Roemer and Donald Sutherland.

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The Cookery Book of Lady Clark of Tillypronie

The Cookery Book of Lady Clark of Tillypronie is a book of recipes collected over a lifetime by Charlotte, Lady Clark of Tillypronie (née Coltman, 1851–1897), and published posthumously in 1909.

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The Crusades (film)

The Crusades is a 1935 American historical adventure film produced and directed by Cecil B. DeMille, and originally released by Paramount Pictures.

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The Crystal Palace Poultry Show

The Crystal Palace Poultry Show (variously also the International Poultry Show and Great Poultry Show) was a poultry show held at The Crystal Palace in London in the United Kingdom.

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The Daily Telegraph

The Daily Telegraph, commonly referred to simply as The Telegraph, is a national British daily broadsheet newspaper published in London by Telegraph Media Group and distributed across the United Kingdom and internationally.

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The Dark Net: Inside the Digital Underworld

The Dark Net: Inside the Digital Underworld is a 2014 nonfiction book by Jamie Bartlett.

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The Deceivers: Allied Military Deception in the Second World War

The Deceivers: Allied Military Deception in the Second World War, by Thaddeus Holt, is a 2004 historical account of Allied military deception during the Second World War.

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The Deportees and Other Stories

The Deportees and Other Stories is the first short story collection by Booker Prize-winning author Roddy Doyle first published by Jonathan Cape in 2007.

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The Deserter (1933 film)

The Deserter (Дезертир, Dezertir) is a 1933 Soviet drama film directed by Vsevolod Pudovkin.

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The Devil's Garden (novel)

The Devil's Garden is the third novel written by British author Edward Docx.

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The Devil's Own Work

The Devil's Own Work is a 1991 novella by Alan Judd which won the Guardian Fiction Award.

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The Diary of a Nobody

The Diary of a Nobody is an English comic novel written by the brothers George and Weedon Grossmith, with illustrations by the latter.

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The Dictator Pope

The Dictator Pope: The Inside Story of the Francis Papacy (Il Papa Dittatore) is a biography of Pope Francis authored by the Anglo–French historian H. J. A. Sire under the pseudonym "Marcantonio Colonna" (the name of a Catholic admiral who fought at the Battle of Lepanto).

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The Dingleys

The Dingleys was an early South African television family drama from 1977, following the South African Broadcasting Corporation's introduction of television.

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The Disappeared (novel)

The Disappeared is a 2015 novel by the English writer Roger Scruton.

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The Doon School

The Doon School (informally Doon) is a boys-only independent boarding school in Dehradun, Uttarakhand, India.

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The Downing Street Years

The Downing Street Years is a memoir by Margaret Thatcher, former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, covering her premiership of 1979 to 1990.

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The Dream and Lie of Franco

The Dream and Lie of Franco is a series of two sheets of prints, comprising 18 individual images, and an accompanying prose poem, by Pablo Picasso produced in 1937.

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The Duke in Darkness

The Duke in Darkness is a 1942 play by Patrick Hamilton.

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The Elgin Marbles (book)

The Elgin Marbles is a 2006 book by American archaeologist Dorothy King about the 5th century BCE Classical Greek marble sculptures known as the Elgin Marbles.

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The Endwood

The Endwood is a disused grade II listed public house on Hamstead Road, in the Handsworth Wood district of Birmingham, England.

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The Establishment

The Establishment generally denotes a dominant group or elite that holds power or authority in a nation or organisation.

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The Establishment: And How They Get Away with It

The Establishment: And How They Get Away With It is a non-fiction book published in 2014 by the British writer and political commentator Owen Jones.

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The Fat Duck

The Fat Duck is a restaurant in Bray, Berkshire, England.

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The Fate of Fenella

The Fate of Fenella was an experiment in consecutive novel writing inspired by J. S. Wood and published in his magazine The Gentlewoman in twenty-four parts between 1891 and 1892.

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The Fighting Temeraire

The Fighting Temeraire tugged to her last berth to be broken up, 1838 is an oil painting by the English artist Joseph Mallord William Turner.

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The Final Test

The Final Test is a 1953 British sports film written by Terence Rattigan, directed by Anthony Asquith, and starring Jack Warner, Robert Morley, George Relph and Ray Jackson.

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The Five Red Herrings

The Five Red Herrings (also The 5 Red Herrings) is a 1931 novel by Dorothy L. Sayers, her sixth featuring Lord Peter Wimsey.

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The Forsaken: An American Tragedy in Stalin’s Russia

The Forsaken: An American Tragedy in Stalin's Russia by Tim Tzouliadis is a 2008 book published by Penguin Books.

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The Foundations of the Nineteenth Century

The Foundations of the Nineteenth Century (Die Grundlagen des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts, 1899) is a book by British-born Germanophile Houston Stewart Chamberlain.

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The Foundling Boy

The Foundling Boy is a 1975 novel by the French writer Michel Déon.

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The Francis Bacon Opera

The Francis Bacon Opera is a comic chamber opera in one act composed by Stephen Crowe.

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The Gap in the Curtain

The Gap in the Curtain is a 1932 borderline science fiction novel by the Scottish author John Buchan.

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The Ghost Goes West

The Ghost Goes West (1935) is a British romantic comedy/fantasy film starring Robert Donat, Jean Parker, and Eugene Pallette, and directed by René Clair, his first English-language film.

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The Glass Key (1935 film)

The Glass Key, released in 1935, is the first of two film adaptations of the suspense novel The Glass Key by Dashiell Hammett.

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The God Beneath the Sea

The God Beneath the Sea is a children's novel based on Greek mythology, written by Leon Garfield and Edward Blishen, illustrated by Charles Keeping, and published by Longman in 1970.

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The Goddess: A Demon

The Goddess: A Demon (1900) is a novel by Richard Marsh.

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The Good Book (book)

The Good Book is a book by A. C. Grayling.

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The Green Bay Tree

The Green Bay Tree is a 1933 three-act drama written by Mordaunt Shairp that explores a "half-suggested homosexual relationship" between a man and his protégé or, in the words of one critic "a rich hot-house sybarite" and someone "he adopted at a tender age and has reared in emasculating luxury".

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The Guardian (1713)

The Guardian was a short-lived newspaper published in London from 12 March to 1 October 1713.

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The Guv'nor (film)

The Guv'nor is a 1935 British comedy film starring George Arliss as a tramp who rides a series of misunderstandings and becomes the president of a bank.

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The Harvest Shall Come

The Harvest Shall Come is a 1942 British documentary film about agricultural work between 1900 and World War II, using the story of a farm laborer to illustrate the importance of agriculture, and the importance of supporting workers in this occupation.

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The History of Cardenio

The History of Cardenio, often referred to as merely Cardenio, is a lost play, known to have been performed by the King's Men, a London theatre company, in 1613.

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The History of King Lear

The History of King Lear is an adaptation by Nahum Tate of William Shakespeare's King Lear.

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The Hockey Stick Illusion

The Hockey Stick Illusion: Climategate and the Corruption of Science is a book written by Andrew Montford and published by Stacey International in 2010.

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The Hunting of the Snark

The Hunting of the Snark (An Agony in 8 Fits) is a poem written by English writer Lewis Carroll.

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The Imitation Game

The Imitation Game is a 2014 American historical drama film directed by Morten Tyldum and written by Graham Moore, loosely based on the biography Alan Turing: The Enigma by Andrew Hodges (which was previously adapted as the stage play and BBC drama Breaking the Code).

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The Informer (1935 film)

The Informer is a 1935 dramatic film, released by RKO.

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The Insider: The Private Diaries of a Scandalous Decade

The Insider: The Private Diaries of a Scandalous Decade is a book written in diary form by Piers Morgan documenting his time as editor of the News of the World and Daily Mirror.

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The Jewish Chronicle

The Jewish Chronicle (The JC) is a London-based Jewish weekly newspaper.

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The Killing$ of Tony Blair

The Killing$ of Tony Blair is a documentary film presented and narrated by George Galloway (who also produced) and co-directed by Sanne van den Bergh and Greg Ward.

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The Kindly Ones (Littell novel)

The Kindly Ones (Les Bienveillantes) is a historical fiction novel written in French by American-born author Jonathan Littell.

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The Kipper and the Corpse

"The Kipper and the Corpse" is the fourth episode of the second series of the British sitcom Fawlty Towers.

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The Last Man Who Knew Everything

The Last Man Who Knew Everything (2006), written by Andrew Robinson, is a biography of the British polymath, Thomas Young (1773–1829).

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The Last Outpost (1935 film)

The Last Outpost is a 1935 American adventure film directed by Charles Barton and Louis J. Gasnier and written by Charles Brackett, Frank Partos and Philip MacDonald.

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The Listener (magazine)

The Listener was a weekly magazine established by the BBC in January 1929 which ceased publication in 1991.

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The Literary Society

The Literary Society is a London dining club, founded by William Wordsworth and others in 1807.

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The Lost Boys (TV series)

The Lost Boys is a 1978 docudrama mini-series produced by the BBC, written by Andrew Birkin, and directed by Rodney Bennett.

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The Lucifer Effect

The Lucifer Effect: Understanding How Good People Turn Evil is a 2007 book which includes professor Philip Zimbardo's first detailed, written account of the events surrounding the 1971 Stanford Prison Experiment (SPE) — a prison simulation study which had to be discontinued after only six days due to several distressing outcomes.

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The Maid of Sker

The Maid of Sker is a three-volume novel by R. D. Blackmore published in 1872.

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The Making of the English Landscape

The Making of the English Landscape is a 1955 book by the English local historian William George Hoskins.

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The Man in the Picture

The Man in the Picture: A Ghost Story, is a novel by English author Susan Hill, first published in 2007 by Profile Books.

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The March of Time

The March of Time is an American short film series sponsored by Time Inc. and shown in movie theaters from 1935 to 1951.

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The Master of the House

The Master of the House is a novel written by Radclyffe Hall and published in 1932 — her first published work after her 1928 The Well of Loneliness.

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The Memory of Love

The Memory of Love is a 2010 novel by Aminatta Forna about the experiences of three men in Sierra Leone.

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The Memory Wars

The Memory Wars: Freud's Legacy in Dispute is a 1995 book about Sigmund Freud and recovered memory therapy by the critic Frederick Crews, writing with Harold P. Blum, Marcia Cavell, Morris Eagle, Matthew Erdelyi, Allen Esterson, Robert R. Holt, James Hopkins, Lester Luborsky, David D. Olds, Mortimer Ostow, Bernard L. Pacella, Herbert S. Peyser, Charlotte Krause Prozan, Theresa Reid, James L. Rice, Jean Schimek, Marian Tolpin, and a contributor using the pseudonym "Penelope".

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The Moneypenny Diaries

The Moneypenny Diaries is a series of novels and short stories chronicling the life of Miss Moneypenny, M's personal secretary in Ian Fleming's James Bond series; it is considered an official spin-off of the Bond books.

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The Monster (novella)

The Monster is an 1898 novella by American author Stephen Crane (1871–1900).

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The Moorside

The Moorside is a 2017 two-part British television drama.

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The Movement (literature)

The Movement was a term coined in 1954 by J. D. Scott, literary editor of The Spectator, to describe a group of writers including Philip Larkin, Kingsley Amis, Donald Davie, D. J. Enright, John Wain, Elizabeth Jennings, Thom Gunn and Robert Conquest.

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The Murder Man

The Murder Man is a 1935 American crime-drama film starring Spencer Tracy, Virginia Bruce, and Lionel Atwill, and directed by Tim Whelan.

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The Museum of Curiosity

The Museum of Curiosity, formerly titled The Professor of Curiosity, is a comedy panel game on BBC Radio 4 that was first broadcast on 20 February 2008.

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The Mystery of the Sardine

The Mystery of the Sardine is a novel by Polish-English writer Stefan Themerson.

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The National (Scotland)

The National is a Scottish daily newspaper that is owned by the publisher Newsquest.

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The National Interest

The National Interest (TNI) is an American bimonthly international affairs magazine published by the Center for the National Interest.

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The Nine Tailors

The Nine Tailors is a 1934 mystery novel by British writer Dorothy L. Sayers, her ninth featuring Lord Peter Wimsey.

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The Oldie

The Oldie is a British monthly magazine written for older people "as a light-hearted alternative to a press obsessed with youth and celebrity", according to their website.

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The Optimists (novel)

The Optimists is the fourth novel by English author, Andrew Miller, released on 21 March 2005 through Sceptre.

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The Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold

The Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold is a novel by the British writer Evelyn Waugh, first published in July 1957.

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The Palace

The Palace is a British drama television series that aired on ITV in 2008.

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The Palm-Wine Drinkard

The Palm-Wine Drinkard (subtitled "and His Dead Palm-Wine Tapster in the Dead's Town") is a novel published in 1952 by the Nigerian author Amos Tutuola.

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The Passing of the Third Floor Back

The Passing of the Third Floor Back is a 1935 British drama film directed by Berthold Viertel and starring Conrad Veidt, Anna Lee, Rene Ray and Frank Cellier.

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The Penelopiad

The Penelopiad is a novella by Margaret Atwood.

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The Phantom Light

The Phantom Light is a 1935 British crime film, a low-budget "quota quickie" directed by Michael Powell and starring Binnie Hale, Gordon Harker, Milton Rosmer and Herbert Lomas.

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The Principal York

The Principal York is an historic Grade II listed building adjacent to York railway station, England.

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The Promise (2011 TV serial)

The Promise is a British television serial in four episodes written and directed by Peter Kosminsky, with music by Debbie Wiseman.

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The Pursuit of Glory

The Pursuit of Glory: Europe 1648–1815, written by the British historian Timothy Blanning, was first published by Allen Lane in 2007.

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The Pursuit of Laughter

The Pursuit of Laughter is a 2008 collection of diaries, articles, reviews and portraits by Diana Mitford.

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The Queen's Knight (book)

The Queen's Knight: The Extraordinary Life of Queen Victoria's Most Trusted Confidant is a book by Martyn Downer published in 2007.

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The Quest for Power

The Quest for Power is book on the history of engineering written by Hugh Pembroke Vowles and Margaret Winifred Vowles.

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The Rabbi's Wife

The Rabbi's Wife is a 1977 novel by David Benedictus.

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The Raft of the Medusa

The Raft of the Medusa (Le Radeau de la Méduse) is an oil painting of 1818–1819 by the French Romantic painter and lithographer Théodore Géricault (1791–1824).

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The Rage Against God

The Rage Against God (subtitle in US editions: How Atheism Led Me to Faith) is the fifth book by Peter Hitchens, first published in 2010.

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The Raj Quartet

The Raj Quartet is a four-volume novel sequence, written by Paul Scott, about the concluding years of the British Raj in India.

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The Real Global Warming Disaster

The Real Global Warming Disaster (Is the Obsession with 'Climate Change' Turning Out to Be the Most Costly Scientific Blunder in History?) is a 2009 book by English journalist and author Christopher Booker in which he asserts that global warming can not be attributed to humans, and then alleges how the scientific opinion on climate change was formulated.

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The Right to Privacy (article)

"The Right to Privacy" (4 Harvard L.R. 193 (Dec. 15, 1890)) is a law review article written by Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis, and published in the 1890 Harvard Law Review.

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The Salisbury Review

The Salisbury Review is a British conservative magazine, published quarterly and founded in 1982.

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The Scapegoat (painting)

The Scapegoat (1854–56) is a painting by William Holman Hunt which depicts the "scapegoat" described in the Book of Leviticus.

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The Scots Peerage

The Scots Peerage is a nine-volume book series of the Scottish nobility compiled and edited by Sir James Balfour Paul, published in Edinburgh from 1904 to 1914.

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The Sense of an Ending

The Sense of an Ending is a 2011 novel written by British author Julian Barnes.

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The Sirens and Ulysses

The Sirens and Ulysses is a large oil painting on canvas by the English artist William Etty, first exhibited in 1837.

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The Sleeping Prince (play)

The Sleeping Prince: An Occasional Fairy Tale is a 1953 play by Terence Rattigan, conceived to coincide with the coronation of Elizabeth II in the same year.

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The Solid Mandala

The Solid Mandala, the seventh published novel by Australian author Patrick White, Nobel Prize winner of 1973, first published in 1966.

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The Song of Ceylon

The Song of Ceylon is a 1934 British documentary film directed by Basil Wright and produced by John Grierson for the Ceylon Tea Propaganda Board.

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The Sovereignty of Good

The Sovereignty of Good is a book of moral philosophy by Iris Murdoch.

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The Spectator (1711)

The Spectator was a daily publication founded by Joseph Addison and Richard Steele in England, lasting from 1711 to 1712.

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The Spy Who Loved Me (novel)

The Spy Who Loved Me is the ninth novel in Ian Fleming's James Bond series, first published by Jonathan Cape on 16 April 1962.

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The Stonebreaker

The Stonebreaker is an 1857 oil-on-canvas painting by Henry Wallis.

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The Story of Ivy

The Story of Ivy is a 1927 melodramatic novel by the British writer Marie Belloc Lowndes.

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The Strange Death of Tory England

The Strange Death of Tory England is a book of political commentary by the journalist Geoffrey Wheatcroft, published in 2005.

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The Sun (United Kingdom)

The Sun is a tabloid newspaper published in the United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland.

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The Sweetest Dream

The Sweetest Dream is a 2001 novel by British Nobel Prize in Literature-winner Doris Lessing.

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The Tenant of Wildfell Hall

The Tenant of Wildfell Hall is the second and final novel by the English author Anne Brontë.

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The Third Circle

The Third Circle is a collection of short stories by Frank Norris with an introduction by William Henry Irwin.

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The Third Man

The Third Man is a 1949 British film noir directed by Carol Reed and written by Graham Greene.

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The Ticket-of-Leave Man (play)

The Ticket-of-Leave Man is an 1863 stage melodrama in four acts by the British writer Tom Taylor, based on a French drama, Le Retour de Melun.

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The Trouble with Atheism

The Trouble with Atheism is an hour-long documentary on atheism, presented by Rod Liddle.

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The Two Cultures

The Two Cultures is the first part of an influential 1959 Rede Lecture by British scientist and novelist C. P. Snow.

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The Two Pound Tram

The Two Pound Tram is a novel written by William Newton (a pseudonym of Kenneth Newton, a retired doctor).

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The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry is a novel by Rachel Joyce, published in 2012.

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The Unthanks

The Unthanks (until 2009, Rachel Unthank and the Winterset) are an English folk group known for their eclectic approach in combining traditional English folk, particularly Northumbrian folk music, with other musical genres.

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The Various Haunts of Men

The Various Haunts of Men (2004) is a novel by Susan Hill.

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The Violins of Saint-Jacques

The Violins of Saint-Jacques is an opera in three acts by Malcolm Williamson to an English libretto by William Chappell after the 1953 novel by Patrick Leigh Fermor.

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The Visit of the Royal Physician

The Visit of the Royal Physician (Livläkarens besök) is a 1999 novel by the Swedish writer Per Olov Enquist.

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The Water Diviner

The Water Diviner is a 2014 drama film directed by and starring Russell Crowe, in his directorial debut, and written by Andrew Anastasios and Andrew Knight.

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The Welfare Trait

The Welfare Trait is a 2015 non-fiction science book by Adam Perkins, Lecturer in the Neurobiology of Personality at King's College London.

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The Wimsey Papers

The Wimsey Papers are a series of articles by Dorothy L. Sayers published between November 1939 and January 1940 in The Spectator.

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The Winding Stair (novel)

The Winding Stair is a 1923 novel of romance and adventure by A. E. W. Mason, originally published by Hodder & Stoughton.

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The Woman Clothed with the Sun

The Woman Clothed with the Sun; being The Confession of John McHaffie concerning his sojourn in the Wilderness among the folk called the Buchanites, is a historical novella by the British writer F. L. Lucas.

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The Worst Date Ever

The Worst Date Ever or How it Took a Comedy Writer to Expose Africa's Secret War is a memoir written by the British comedy writer Jane Bussmann.

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The Year of the Angry Rabbit

The Year of the Angry Rabbit is a science fiction novel by Australian author Russell Braddon, in which giant mutant rabbits run amok in Australia while the Prime Minister uses a new superweapon to dominate the planet.

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The Young Duke

The Young Duke - a moral tale though gay is the third novel written by Benjamin Disraeli who would later become a Prime Minister of Great Britain.

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Theo Aronson

Theodore Ian Wilson Aronson (13 November 1929 – 13 May 2003) was a royal biographer with an easy manner which enabled him to meet and earn the trust of his subjects.

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Theo Hobson

Theo Hobson (born 1972) is a British theologian.

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Theodore Dalrymple

Anthony Malcolm Daniels (born 11 October 1949), who generally uses the pen name Theodore Dalrymple, is an English writer and retired prison doctor and psychiatrist.

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Theodore Roussel

Theodore Casimir Roussel (1847–1926) was a French-born English painter and graphic artist, best known for his landscapes and genre scenes.

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Theophilus Jones (Royal Navy officer)

Theophilus Jones (September 1760 – 8 November 1835) was an Irish officer in the British Royal Navy.

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Theresa May

Theresa Mary May (Brasier; born 1 October 1956) is a British politician serving as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and Leader of the Conservative Party since 2016.

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These Three

These Three is a 1936 American drama film directed by William Wyler.

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Third Way (magazine)

Third Way was a British current affairs magazine written from a Christian perspective.

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This Animal is Mischievous

This Animal is Mischievous is a 1965 novel by David Benedictus.

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This Is Me... Then

This Is Me...

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Thomas Aquinas

Saint Thomas Aquinas (1225 – 7 March 1274) was an Italian Dominican friar, Catholic priest, and Doctor of the Church.

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Thomas Brereton

Lieutenant-Colonel Thomas Brereton (1782–1832) was an officer of the British Army.

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Thomas Goodwin

Thomas Goodwin (Rollesby, Norfolk, 5 October 1600 – 23 February 1680), known as "the Elder", was an English Puritan theologian and preacher, and an important leader of religious Independents.

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Thomas Hancock Nunn

Thomas Hancock Nunn (1859-1937) was an English social reformer.

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Thomas Lister, 4th Baron Ribblesdale

Thomas Lister, 4th Baron Ribblesdale (29 October 1854 – 21 October 1925) was a British Liberal politician.

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Thomas Martin (Conservative politician)

Thomas Ballantyne Martin (13 November 1901 – 28 January 1995) was a British politician, stockbroker and journalist.

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Thomas Medwin

Thomas Medwin (1788–1869) was an early 19th-century English poet and translator.

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Thomas Owen Beachcroft

Thomas Owen (T. O.) Beachcroft (9 March 1902 – 11 December 1988) was born in Clifton, Bristol.

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Thomas Sandby

Thomas Sandby (1721 – 25 June 1798) was an English draughtsman, watercolour artist, architect and teacher.

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Thomas Sidney

Thomas Sidney (5 January 1805 – 10 March 1889) was a British Liberal Party and Conservative Party politician, and tea merchant.

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Thomas Szasz

Thomas Stephen Szasz (Szász Tamás István; 15 April 1920 – 8 September 2012) was a Hungarian-American academic, psychiatrist and psychoanalyst.

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Thomas W. Hodgkinson

Thomas W. Hodgkinson (born 1976) is a British journalist, author, and contributing editor at The Week.

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Thornton Leigh Hunt

Thornton Leigh Hunt (10 September 1810 – 25 June 1873) was the first editor of the British daily broadsheet newspaper The Daily Telegraph.

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Three Came Home

Three Came Home is a 1950 American post-war film directed by Jean Negulesco, based on the memoirs of the same name by writer Agnes Newton Keith.

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Three to See the King

Three to See the King, the third novel by Booker Prize-shortlisted author Magnus Mills, published in 2001, is part parable and part speculative fiction.

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Thunderbirds (TV series)

Thunderbirds is a British science-fiction television series created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson, filmed by their production company AP Films (APF) and distributed by ITC Entertainment.

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Tiananmen Exiles

Tiananmen Exiles: Voices of the Struggle for Democracy in China is a scholarly book by Rowena Xiaoqing He, published by Palgrave Macmillan in April 2014.

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Tibor Szamuely (historian)

Tibor Szamuely (May 14, 1925 – 10 December 1972) was a Hungarian-born historian and polemicist.

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Tiddlywinks

Tiddlywinks is an indoor game played on a flat felt mat with sets of small discs called "winks", a pot, which is the target, and a collection of squidgers, which are also discs.

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Tim Dowling

Tim Dowling (born June 1963, Connecticut, USA) is an American journalist and author who writes a weekly column in The Guardian about his life with his family in London.

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Tim Heald

Tim Villiers Heald FRSL (28 January 1944 – 20 November 2016) was a British author, biographer, journalist and public speaker.

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Tim Loughton

Timothy Paul Loughton, (born 30 May 1962) is a British Conservative Party politician, and has been Member of Parliament (MP) for East Worthing and Shoreham since the 1997 general election.

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Tim Luckhurst

Timothy Colin Harvey Luckhurst (born 8 January 1963) is a British journalist and academic, currently the Professor of Journalism at the University of Kent, and the founding head of the university's Centre for Journalism.

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Tim Soutphommasane

Thinethavone "Tim" Soutphommasane (born 1982) is an Australian public servant, academic, and social commentator.

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Tim Stanley

Timothy Randolph "Tim" Stanley (born 1982) is a British journalist and historian.

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Timeline of events in Hamilton, Ontario

Below is a timeline of events in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.

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Timeline of Oxford

The following is a timeline of the history of the city, University and colleges of Oxford, England.

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Timeline of the 2011 Libyan Civil War

The timeline of the Libyan Civil War begins on 15 February 2011 and ends on 20 October 2011.

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Timeline of tuition fees in the United Kingdom

Tuition fees in the United Kingdom were reintroduced for full-time resident Students in 1998, as a means of funding tuition to undergraduate and postgraduate certificate students at universities.

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Timothy Bell, Baron Bell

Timothy John Leigh Bell, Baron Bell (born 18 October 1941), is a British advertising and public relations executive, best known for his advisory role in Margaret Thatcher's three successful general election campaigns and his co-founding and 30 years of heading Bell Pottinger.

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Timothy Birdsall

Timothy Birdsall (10 May 1936 – 10 June 1963) was an English cartoonist.

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Timothy Evans

Timothy John Evans (20 November 1924 – 9 March 1950) was a Welshman falsely convicted and hanged for the murder of his wife and infant daughter at their residence at 10 Rillington Place in Notting Hill, London.

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Timothy Garton Ash

Timothy Garton Ash CMG FRSA (born 12 July 1955) is a British historian, author and commentator.

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Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (film)

Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is a 2011 Cold War espionage film directed by Tomas Alfredson.

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Toby Harnden

Toby Harnden (born 14 January 1966) is an Anglo-American journalist and author.

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Toby Young

Toby Daniel Moorsom Young (born 17 October 1963) is a British journalist and formerly Director of the New Schools Network, a free schools charity.

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Tom Cruise: All the World's a Stage

Tom Cruise: All the World's A Stage is an authorized biography of actor Tom Cruise, written by British film critic Iain Johnstone.

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Tom Denning, Baron Denning

Alfred Thompson “Tom” Denning, Baron Denning, (23 January 1899 – 5 March 1999) was an English lawyer and judge.

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Tom G. Palmer

Tom Gordon Palmer (born 1956, Bitburg-Mötsch, West Germany) is a libertarian author and theorist, a Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute and Vice President for International Programs at the Atlas Network.

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Tom Gross

Tom Gross is a British-born journalist, international affairs commentator, and human rights campaigner specializing in the Middle East.

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Tom Harrisson

Major Tom Harnett Harrisson, DSO OBE (26 September 1911 – 16 January 1976) was a British polymath.

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Tom Rogan

Tom Rogan (born 8 February 1986) is a political journalist based in Washington, D.C.

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Tom Service

Tom Service (born 8 March 1976) is a British writer, music journalist and television and radio presenter, who has written regularly for The Guardian since 1999 and presented on BBC Radio 3 since 2001.

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Tom Sharpe

Thomas Ridley Sharpe (30 March 1928 – 6 June 2013) was an English satirical novelist, best known for his Wilt series, as well as Porterhouse Blue and Blott on the Landscape, which were both adapted for television.

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Tom Stacey

Tom Stacey FRSL (born 11 January 1930) is a British novelist, publisher, screenwriter, foreign correspondent, and penologist.

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Tom Switzer

Tom Switzer (born 1971) Switzer is the Executive Director of The Centre for Independent Studies, a Sydney based public policy research think tank.

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Tommy Robinson (activist)

Stephen Christopher Yaxley-Lennon (born 27 November 1982), known by the pseudonym Tommy Robinson, and previously as Andrew McMaster and Paul Harris, is an English far-right activist who co-founded and served as spokesman and leader of the English Defence League (EDL), from which he resigned in 2013.

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Tony McNulty

Anthony James McNulty (born 3 November 1958) is a British politician who was the Labour Member of Parliament (MP) for Harrow East from 1997 to 2010.

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Tony Palmer

Tony Palmer (born 29 August 1941 in London) Retrieved 24 September 2011 is a British film director and author.

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Tony Roberts (poet)

Tony Roberts (born 1949) is a contemporary English poet and critic.

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Top Hat

Top Hat is a 1935 American screwball musical comedy film in which Fred Astaire plays an American dancer named Jerry Travers, who comes to London to star in a show produced by Horace Hardwick (Edward Everett Horton).

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Topology

In mathematics, topology (from the Greek τόπος, place, and λόγος, study) is concerned with the properties of space that are preserved under continuous deformations, such as stretching, crumpling and bending, but not tearing or gluing.

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Totnes Conservative primary, 2009

The Totnes Conservative Party parliamentary primary of 2009 was the 1st open primary election used to select the Conservative Prospective Parliamentary Candidate for the constituency of Totnes.

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Touch Wood

Touch Wood is a play by the British writer Dodie Smith.

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Tove Jansson

Tove Marika Jansson (Finland; 9 August 1914 – 27 June 2001) was a Swedish-speaking Finnish author, novelist, painter, illustrator and comic strip author.

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Tracey Emin

Tracey Emin, CBE, RA (born 3 July 1963) is an English contemporary artist known for her autobiographical and confessional artwork.

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Trade Unions International of Miners

The Trade Unions International of Miners was a trade union international affiliated with the World Federation of Trade Unions.

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Traditional English pronunciation of Latin

The traditional English pronunciation of Latin, and Classical Greek words borrowed through Latin, is the way the Latin language was traditionally pronounced by speakers of English until the early 20th century.

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Trail of the Octopus (book)

Trail of the Octopus: From Beirut to Lockerbie – Inside the DIA is a book co-written by Lester Coleman and Donald Goddard.

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Treasure Island (1934 film)

Treasure Island is a 1934 film adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson’s famous 1883 novel Treasure Island.

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Trevor Kavanagh

Trevor Michael Thomas Kavanagh (born 19 January 1943) is an English journalist and former political editor of The Sun.

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True Sun (London newspaper)

The True Sun was a London, pro-Whig, evening newspaper that was first published on 5 March 1832 and ceased publication in December 1837.

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Turn of the Tide

Turn of the Tide (1935) is a British drama film directed by Norman Walker and starring John Garrick, Geraldine Fitzgerald, and Wilfrid Lawson, and was the first feature film made by J. Arthur Rank.

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Twelve Responses to Tragedy

Twelve Responses to Tragedy, or the Yalta Memorial, is a memorial located in the Yalta Memorial Garden on Cromwell Road in South Kensington in west London.

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Two for Tonight

Two for Tonight is a 1935 American musical comedy film directed by Frank Tuttle and starring Bing Crosby, Joan Bennett, and Mary Boland.

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Tygua - San José (TransMilenio)

The simple station without exchange Tygua - San José, forms part of the TransMilenio mass transit system of Bogota inaugurated in the year 2000.

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Typhoid fever

Typhoid fever, also known simply as typhoid, is a bacterial infection due to ''Salmonella'' typhi that causes symptoms.

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UK Independence Party

The UK Independence Party (UKIP) is a Eurosceptic and right-wing populist political party in the United Kingdom.

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UK Independence Party leadership election, November 2016

The November 2016 UK Independence Party leadership election took place following the announcement on 4 October 2016 by Diane James, the leader-elect of the UK Independence Party, that she would not accept the leadership of the party, despite winning the leadership election 18 days earlier.

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UK Jewish Film Festival

The UK International Jewish Film Festival (UKIJFF) is an annual film festival dedicated to world cinema that explores Jewish life, history and culture worldwide.

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UKIP: The First 100 Days

UKIP: The First 100 Days is a 2015 mockumentary which was broadcast on Channel 4 in the United Kingdom on 16 February 2015, a few months before the May 2015 general election.

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Uniformitarianism

Uniformitarianism, also known as the Doctrine of Uniformity,, "The assumption of spatial and temporal invariance of natural laws is by no means unique to geology since it amounts to a warrant for inductive inference which, as Bacon showed nearly four hundred years ago, is the basic mode of reasoning in empirical science.

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Unionist Free Food League

The Unionist Free Food League was a British pressure group formed on 13 July 1903 by Conservative and Liberal Unionist MPs who believed in free trade in order to campaign against Joseph Chamberlain's proposals for Tariff Reform, which would involve an import tax on food.

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Unite the Right rally

The Unite the Right rally, also known as the Charlottesville rally or Charlottesville riots, was a white nationalist rally that occurred in Charlottesville, Virginia, United States, from August 11 to 12, 2017.

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United Kingdom European Union membership referendum, 2016

The United Kingdom European Union membership referendum, also known as the EU referendum and the Brexit referendum, took place on 23 June 2016 in the United Kingdom (UK) and Gibraltar to gauge support for the country either remaining a member of, or leaving, the European Union (EU) under the provisions of the European Union Referendum Act 2015 and also the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000.

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Universities in the United Kingdom

Universities in the United Kingdom have generally been instituted by Royal Charter, Papal Bull, Act of Parliament or an instrument of government under the Further and Higher Education Act 1992.

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Unweaving the Rainbow

Unweaving the Rainbow: Science, Delusion and the Appetite for Wonder is a 1998 book by Richard Dawkins, in which the author discusses the relationship between science and the arts from the perspective of a scientist.

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Uses of podcasting

Podcasting refers to the creation and regular distribution of podcasts through the Internet.

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Utopian Essays and Practical Proposals

Utopian Essays and Practical Proposals is a 1962 book of essays on social issues by Paul Goodman.

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Valery Tarsis

Valery Yakovlevich Tarsis (Валерій Яковлевич Тарсіс, Вале́рий Я́ковлевич Та́рсис;, Kiev – 3 March 1983, Bern) was a Ukrainian writer, literary critic, and translator.

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Vanessa Collingridge

Vanessa Jane Collingridge (born 12 January 1968) is a British author and broadcaster.

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Venus with Pistol

Venus With Pistol is a first person narrative novel by English author Gavin Lyall, first published in 1969.

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Vera Baird

Dame Vera Baird (née Thomas; born 13 February 1950) is a British politician, barrister, and academic.

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Vermeer's Hat

Vermeer's Hat: The Seventeenth Century and the Dawn of the Global World is a book by the historian Professor Timothy Brook in which he explores the roots of world trade in the 17th century, through six paintings by the Dutch Golden Age painter Johannes Vermeer.

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Vernon Coleman

Vernon Coleman (born 18 May 1946) is a former general practitioner,http://www.vernoncoleman.com/biog.htm and the author of over 100 books, including non-fiction works about human health, politics, cricket, and animal issues, and a range of novels.

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Vice News

Vice News (stylized as VICE News) is Vice Media, Inc.'s current affairs channel, producing daily documentary essays and video through its website and YouTube channel.

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Victor de Waal

Victor Alexander de Waal (born 2 February 1929) is a British Anglican priest.

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Villa Diodati

The Villa Diodati is a mansion in the village of Cologny near Lake Geneva in Switzerland, notable because Lord Byron rented it and stayed there with John Polidori in the summer of 1816.

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Villiers Street

Villiers Street is a street in London connecting the Strand with the Embankment.

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Virginia Graham (English writer)

Virginia Margaret Graham (1910–1993) was a London-born English writer, critic and poet, whose humorous verses on Second World War subjects were republished in London by Persephone Books in 2000 as Consider the Years 1938–1946.

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Virtual Festivals

Virtual Festivals is a UK music website that publishes news, reviews, listings, videos, photographs, interviews and competitions on music festivals.

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Virtually Normal

Virtually Normal: An Argument About Homosexuality (1995; second edition 1996) is a book about the politics of homosexuality by the political commentator Andrew Sullivan, in which the author criticizes four different perspectives on gay rights in American society, which he calls the "Prohibitionist", "Liberationist", "Conservative", and "Liberal" views, seeking to expose internal inconsistencies within each of them.

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Virtue signalling

Virtue signalling is the conspicuous expression of moral values.

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Vitali Vitaliev

Vitali Vitaliev (Виталий Витальев) is a Ukrainian-born journalist and writer who has worked in Russia, England, Scotland, Australia and Ireland.

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Vulcan (hypothetical planet)

Vulcan is a small hypothetical planet that was proposed to exist in an orbit between Mercury and the Sun.

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W. H. Prior

William Henry Prior (1812 - 23 February 1882) was a painter and engraver known for his depictions of London and its environs.

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W. Horsfall Carter

William Horsfall Carter, most commonly known in print as W. Horsfall Carter (25 March 1900 – 9 June 1976) was a British journalist and European civil servant.

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Waddesdon Manor

Waddesdon Manor is a country house in the village of Waddesdon, in Buckinghamshire, England.

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Wafic Saïd

Wafic Rida Saïd (وفيق رضا سعيد) (born 21 December 1939) is a Syrian-Saudi Arabian financier, businessman and philanthropist, who has been resident for many years in Monaco.

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Walking to Hollywood

Walking to Hollywood is a 2010 novel by writer and media personality Will Self.

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Walley Chamberlain Oulton

Walley Chamberlain Oulton (1770?–1820?) was an Irish playwright, theatre historian and man of letters.

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Wally Fawkes

Walter Ernest "Wally" Fawkes (born 21 June 1924) is a British-Canadian jazz clarinetist and a satirical cartoonist.

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Walter Noel Hartley

Sir Walter Noel Hartley FRS FRSE DSc (1845-11 September 1913) was a British chemist.

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Walter Taplin

Walter Taplin (1910–1986) was editor of The Spectator between 1953 and 1954.

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War in North-West Pakistan

The War in North-West Pakistan, also known as the War in Waziristan, is an armed conflict involving Pakistan, and armed militant groups such as the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), Jundallah, Lashkar-e-Islam (LeI), TNSM, al-Qaeda, and their Central Asian allies such as the ISIL–Khorasan (ISIL), Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, East Turkistan Movement, Emirate of Caucasus, and elements of organized crime.

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Wardour Street English

Wardour Street English, sometimes simply Wardour Street, refers to a pseudo-archaic form of diction affected by some writers, particularly those of historical fiction.

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Warlight

Warlight is a 2018 novel by Canadian author Michael Ondaatje.

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Wave (Deraniyagala book)

Wave: Life and Memories after the Tsunami is a memoir by Sonali Deraniyagala based on the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami.

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We're Going on a Bear Hunt

We're Going on a Bear Hunt is a 1989 children's picture book written by Michael Rosen and illustrated by Helen Oxenbury.

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Welcome to Obamaland

Welcome to Obamaland: I Have Seen Your Future and It Doesn't Work is a book by British journalist and author James Delingpole, published by Regnery Press in 2009.

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Welcome, Honourable Visitors

Welcome, Honourable Visitors is a 1958 novel by the French writer Jean Raspail.

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Wendy Cope

Wendy Cope, OBE (born 21 July 1945) is a contemporary English poet.

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Wendy Tan White

Wendy Tan White MBE is a British technology entrepreneur and technology investor.

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Whammy!

Whammy! is the third studio album by American new wave band the B-52's.

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What the Papers Say

What The Papers Say was a British radio, and formerly television, series.

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What We Believe But Cannot Prove

What We Believe But Cannot Prove: Today's Leading Thinkers on Science in the Age of Certainty is a non-fiction book edited by literary agent John Brockman with an introduction by novelist Ian McEwan and published by Harper Perennial.

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What3words

What3words (stylized what3words) is a geocoding system for the communication of locations with a resolution of three metres.

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When God Was a Rabbit

When God Was a Rabbit is a book by Sarah Winman that was first published in 2011.

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When the Professor Got Stuck in the Snow

When the Professor Got Stuck in the Snow is a novel by British author Dan Rhodes, a "rural farce" about a visit to an obscure English village by a fictional Richard Dawkins.

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Where's George? (film)

Where's George? is a British comedy film starring Sydney Howard.

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White slavery

White slavery, white slave trade, and white slave traffic historically refer to the enslavement of White Europeans by non-Europeans (such as Africans), as well as by Europeans themselves, such as the Viking thralls or European Galley slaves.

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White's

White's is a gentleman's club in St James's, London, regarded as one of the most exclusive of its kind.

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Who Funds You?

Who Funds You? is a British project that seeks to rate and promote transparency of funding sources of think tanks.

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Who Paid the Piper?

Who Paid the Piper? The CIA and the Cultural Cold War (U.S. title The Cultural Cold War: The CIA and the World of Arts and Letters) is a 1999 book by Frances Stonor Saunders.

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Why Does It Hurt So Bad

"Why Does It Hurt So Bad" is a song recorded by American singer Whitney Houston for the 1995 film Waiting to Exhale.

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Why Freud Was Wrong

Why Freud Was Wrong: Sin, Science and Psychoanalysis (1995; second edition 1996; third edition 2005) is a book by Richard Webster, in which the author provides a critique of Sigmund Freud and psychoanalysis, and attempts to develop his own theory of human nature.

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Wikimedia UK

Wikimedia UK (WMUK) is a registered charity established to support volunteers in the United Kingdom who work on Wikimedia projects such as Wikipedia.

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Wilbur Dawbarn

Wilbur Dawbarn is a British comics artist and cartoonist based in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire.

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Wilhelmina FitzClarence, Countess of Munster

Wilhelmina FitzClarence, Countess of Munster (née Kennedy-Erskine; 27 June 1830 – 9 October 1906) was a British peeress and novelist.

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Will Hay

Hay in ''The Ghost of St. Michael's'' (1941) William Thomson Hay (6 December 1888 – 18 April 1949) was an English comedian, actor, author, film director and amateur astronomer who came to notice for his theatrical sketch as a jocular schoolmaster, known as Dr.

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Will Lyons

Will Lyons is a journalist, newspaper columnist, award-winning wine writer and broadcaster.

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William – an Englishman

William – an Englishman is a 1919 novel by Cicely Hamilton.

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William Beach Thomas

Sir William Beach Thomas, (22 May 186812 May 1957) was a British author and journalist known for his work as a war correspondent and his writings about nature and country life.

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William Crolly

William Crolly (8 June 1780 – 8 April 1849) was successively the Bishop of Down and Connor from 1825 to 1835 and then Roman Catholic Archbishop of Armagh from 1835 to 1849.

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William Etty

William Etty (10 March 1787 – 13 November 1849) was an English artist best known for his history paintings containing nude figures.

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William Flavelle Monypenny

William Flavelle Monypenny (7 August 1866 – 23 November 1912) was an Irish-born journalist and editor whose career was split between London and South Africa.

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William Friedkin

William Friedkin (born August 29, 1935)Biskind, p. 200.

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William Hague

William Jefferson Hague, Baron Hague of Richmond, (born 26 March 1961), is a British Conservative politician and life peer.

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William Harper (Rhodesian politician)

William John Harper (22 July 1916 – 8 September 2006) was a politician, general contractor and Royal Air Force fighter pilot who served as a Cabinet minister in Rhodesia (or Southern Rhodesia) from 1962 to 1968, and signed that country's Unilateral Declaration of Independence (UDI) from Britain in 1965.

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William Hay, 4th Earl of Kinnoull

William Hay, 4th Earl of Kinnoull (d. 28 March 1677) was a Scottish peer and soldier, loyal to King Charles I. He escaped not once but twice from Edinburgh Castle.

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William Hay, 6th Earl of Kinnoull

William Thomas Hay, 6th Earl of Kinnoull (d. 10 May 1709) was a Scottish peer.

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William Lancaster (Queen's)

William Lancaster D.D. (1650–1717) was an English churchman and academic, Provost of The Queen's College, Oxford.

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William Maccall

William Maccall (1812–1888) was a Scottish author and Unitarian minister.

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William McCance

William McCance (1894–1970) was a Scottish artist, and was second Controller of the Gregynog Press in Powys, mid-Wales.

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William Payne (pantomimist)

William Henry Schofield Payne (1804–18 December 1878) was an actor and pantomimist who created much of the stage business connected with the character Harlequin.

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William Plomer

William Charles Franklyn Plomer CBE (he pronounced the surname as ploomer) (10 December 1903 – 21 September 1973) was a South African and British author, known as a novelist, poet and literary editor.

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William Shawcross

William Hartley Hume Shawcross, (born 28 May 1946, Sussex, England) is the Chairman of the Charity Commission for England and Wales, (Glen Owen, Mail Online, Sunday 2 June 2013) and a British writer and commentator.

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William Stones

William Stones, known as Bill Stones (2 October 1904 – 2 July 1969) was a Labour Party politician in the United Kingdom.

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William Taylor Birchenough

William Taylor Birchenough (1891–1962) was a pioneering British aviator and test pilot.

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William Thomas Arnold

William Thomas Arnold (1852–1904) was an Australian-born, English writer and journalist.

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William Tulloch Jeans

William Tulloch Jeans (1848–1907) was a British parliamentary journalist and author.

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William Wilson Hunter

Sir William Wilson Hunter KCSI CIE (15 July 1840 – 6 February 1900) was a Scottish historian, statistician, a compiler and a member of the Indian Civil Service.

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Wilson Harris (journalist)

Henry Wilson Harris (21 September 1883 – 11 January 1955) was editor of The Spectator from 1932 to 1953, and independent MP for Cambridge University from 1945 to 1950.

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Wilson the Wonder Athlete

Wilson the Wonder Athlete or William Wilson is a fictional character whose adventures were initially published in the British illustrated story paper The Wizard published by D. C. Thomson & Co.

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Wimbledon Effect

The Wimbledon effect (Japanese: ウィンブルドン現象, rōmaji: Uinburudon Genshō, literally "Wimbledon Phenomenon") is a chiefly British and Japanese analogy (which possibly originated in Japan) which compares the tennis fame of the Wimbledon Championships, held at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in Wimbledon, London, with the economic success of the United Kingdom's financial services industries – especially those clustered in the City of London.

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Witch Wood

Witch Wood is a 1927 novel by the Scots author John Buchan, set in the Scottish Borders during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms.

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Witch-hunt

A witch-hunt or witch purge is a search for people labelled "witches" or evidence of witchcraft, often involving moral panic or mass hysteria.

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Wivenhoe

Wivenhoe is a town and civil parish in north eastern Essex, England, approximately south east of Colchester.

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WMD conjecture in the aftermath of the 2003 invasion of Iraq

WMD conjecture in the aftermath of the 2003 invasion of Iraq concerns the immediate reactions and consequences to the failure by the United Nations Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC) and the U.S.-led Iraq Survey Group (ISG) to find the alleged stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction during and after 2003 invasion of Iraq.

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Wolf of Kabul

William Sampson or Samson, the Wolf of Kabul, was a literary character in British boys' papers published by D. C. Thomson & Co. He first appeared in The Wizard in 1922.

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Women of Twilight

Women of Twilight is a 1951 play by Sylvia Rayman that became a 1952 film directed by Gordon Parry.

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Women's National Anti-Suffrage League

The Women's National Anti-suffrage League (1908–18) was established in London on 21 July 1908.

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Women's suffrage in the United Kingdom

Women's suffrage in the United Kingdom was a movement to fight for women's right to vote.

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Yehudi Menuhin International Competition for Young Violinists

The Yehudi Menuhin International Competition for Young Violinists (or simply the Menuhin Competition) is an international music competition for violinists under the age of 22.

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Yellow Dog (novel)

Yellow Dog is the title of a 2003 novel by the British writer Martin Amis.

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You Only Live Twice (novel)

You Only Live Twice is the eleventh novel (and twelfth book) in Ian Fleming's James Bond series of stories.

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Young fogey

"Young fogey" is a term humorously applied, in British context, to some younger-generation, rather buttoned-down writers and journalists, such as Simon Heffer, Charles Moore and, for a while, A. N. Wilson.

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Young Independence

Young Independence (YI) is the youth wing of the UK Independence Party (UKIP) and represents all UKIP members aged 30 and under.

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Your Sinclair

Your Sinclair, or YS as it was commonly abbreviated, was a British computer magazine for the Sinclair range of computers, mainly the ZX Spectrum.

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Zamba Zembola

Zamba Zembola (born c. 1780) is the supposed author of an 1847 slave narrative, The Life and Adventures of Zamba, an African Negro King; and his Experience of Slavery in South Carolina, which describes his kidnapping and 40 years of labor as a slave on a plantation in the U.S. state of South Carolina.

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Zhores Medvedev

Zhores Aleksandrovich Medvedev (Жоре́с Алекса́ндрович Медве́дев; born 14 November 1925) is a Russian agronomist, biologist, historian and dissident.

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Zimbabwe Rhodesia

Zimbabwe Rhodesia was an unrecognised state that existed from 1 June 1979 to 12 December 1979.

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Zoe Williams

Zoe Williams (born 1973) is an English columnist, journalist, and author.

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12 Rules for Life

12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos is a 2018 bestselling self-help book by Canadian clinical psychologist and psychology professor Jordan Peterson.

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1700–50 in Western fashion

Fashion in the period 1700–1750 in European and European-influenced countries is characterized by a widening silhouette for both men and women following the tall, narrow look of the 1680s and 90s.

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1711 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1711.

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1833 in Scotland

Events from the year 1833 in Scotland.

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1865 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1877 Wimbledon Championship

The 1877 Wimbledon Championship was a men's tennis tournament held at the All England Croquet and Lawn Tennis Club (AEC & LTC) in Wimbledon, London.

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1910 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1910 in the United Kingdom.

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1915 in poetry

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

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1938 British Mount Everest expedition

Led by Bill Tilman, the 1938 British Mount Everest expedition was a low-key, low-cost expedition which was unlucky in encountering a very early monsoon.

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1957 in Wales

This article is about the particular significance of the year 1957 to Wales and its people.

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1968 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1968 in the United Kingdom.

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1975 Australian constitutional crisis

The 1975 Australian constitutional crisis, also known simply as the Dismissal, has been described as the greatest political and constitutional crisis in Australian history.

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1977 Silver Jubilee and Birthday Honours

The 1977 Silver Jubilee and Birthday Honours were announced on 11 June 1977 to celebrate Her Majesty's Silver Jubilee and Birthday in the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Barbados, Mauritius, Fiji, the Bahamas, Grenada, and Papua New Guinea.

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1988 in Canada

Events from the year 1988 in Canada.

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1990 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1990 in the United Kingdom.

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2006 in English-language radio

The year 2006 saw a number of significant events in radio broadcasting.

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2010s

The 2010s (pronounced "twenty-tens" or "two thousand (and) tens").

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2011 British privacy injunctions controversy

The British privacy injunctions controversy began in early 2011, when London-based tabloid newspapers published stories about anonymous celebrities that were intended to flout what are commonly (but not formally) known in English law as super-injunctions, where the claimant could not be named, and carefully omitting details that could not legally be published.

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2011 England riots

The 2011 England riots occurred between 6 and 11 August 2011, when thousands of people rioted in several London boroughs and in cities and towns across England.

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2011 in Scotland

Events from the year 2011 in Scotland.

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2011 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 2011 in the United Kingdom.

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2017 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 2017 in the United Kingdom.

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23rd World Science Fiction Convention

The 23rd World Science Fiction Convention, also known as Loncon II, was held 27–30 August 1965 at the Mount Royal Hotel in London, United Kingdom.

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24 Hours of a Woman's Life

24 Hours of a Woman's Life is a 1952 British film directed by Victor Saville and starring Merle Oberon.

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References

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

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