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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Grytviken Kino  





2 Mustang District  





3 Mud forts of Panchagarh  





4 The iconic moment  





5 The cut  





6 Annex  





7 1955-1969  





8 Source  





9 Ranking  





10 Kolkata in history  





11 People of Kolkata  





12 Sports and leisure  





13 Science and technology  





14 Animals and plants  





15 Food and beverage  





16 Kolkata and other cities  





17 Notes  





18 Regions  



18.1  Russia  



18.1.1  East  





18.1.2  North  





18.1.3  Central  





18.1.4  West  





18.1.5  South  







18.2  China  



18.2.1  Urban  





18.2.2  Inner  





18.2.3  Outer  







18.3  Indochina  





18.4  India  



18.4.1  East  





18.4.2  West  





18.4.3  Middle  





18.4.4  North  





18.4.5  South  





18.4.6  External  







18.5  Pacific  



18.5.1  North  





18.5.2  Australasia  





18.5.3  Oceania  







18.6  Persia  



18.6.1  East  





18.6.2  Middle  





18.6.3  West  







18.7  Eurasia  



18.7.1  Turkey  





18.7.2  Kurdistan  





18.7.3  Caucasus  







18.8  Levant  



18.8.1  Coastal  





18.8.2  Inland  





18.8.3  Offshore  







18.9  Arabia  



18.9.1  North  





18.9.2  Middle  





18.9.3  South  







18.10  Asia Africa  



18.10.1  North  





18.10.2  Ethiopia  





18.10.3  South  







18.11  Africa  



18.11.1  North  





18.11.2  South  





18.11.3  Middle  





18.11.4  West  





18.11.5  East  







18.12  Notes  
















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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

< User:Aditya Kabir

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Grytviken Kino

[edit]
GuanyinorPadmapani is the goddess of mercy in Buddhist iconography
[edit]

[1]

Will work on this banner
Will work on this banner too

From [1]

Mustang District is a Himali district, which is under the state number 4 of Nepal. The district is known as the district of Himalapari हिमालपारी due to the need to be brought to Dhulagiri Himal (8167) and Nilgiri Himal (7060). The archaeological discovery of Pichig caveas and Vedoresauro, located in Mustang district, has a history of 3000 years in history. On the Bishop map, the presence of Mustang district is located at the height of 28 degrees 33 minutes 51 seconds to 29 degrees 52 minutes 52 seconds north latitude and 83 degrees 28 minutes 54 seconds to 84 degrees 14 minutes 58 seconds long. In the east, Manang district मनाङ, Dolpa district डोल्पा in the west, Tibet in the autonomous region of China in the north तिब्वत/चीनको स्वशासित क्षेत्र तिब्बत, and Magdie म्याग्दी district in the south, the total area of ​​this district is 356.21 square km. Is there Which is 2.42 percent of the total area of ​​Nepal. The district headquarters Jomsom is at the height of 2,710 meters above sea level. From sea level to 2010 m. (Waterfall घाँसा) from 8167 m (Dhaulagiri) is the cold water cooling area of ​​Mustang district. Even in the lower part of the district, although it is relatively high, it is very low in the upper part. The average annual rainfall is 200m. And snow falls in the upper part. The maximum temperature of the summer month is 26 degrees. And at least 9 degrees in the hood month. Drops up According to the climate, the congested vegetation near the Himalayas is known as Hocha Kanada. The forest area of ​​this district is 3.24 percent of the total area ie 12,324 hectares. Biological diversity estimates that there are approximately 1,226 species of vegetation in this district. There are 474 species species of bird species, as well as animals like Himachuva, Kastri, deer, wild horse etc.

According to new structure, 5 villages: 1, Gharpajhong (administrative center Jomsom), 2, Thausang (administrative center Kobang), 3, Dalome (administrative center Charang), 4, Lo Manthang (administrative center Lo Manthang) and 5, Barhagaun Muktichhetra (administrative center Kagbeni). According to the 2068 Census, the total population is 13,452 in this district where there is an election area.

५ गाउँपालिकाहरू: १, घरपझोङ (केन्द्र जोमसोम), २,थासाङ (केन्द्र कोवाङ),३, दालोमे (केन्द्र चराङ), ४,लोमन्थाङ (केन्द्र लोमन्थाङ) र ५,वाह्रगाउँ मुक्तिक्षेत्र (केन्द्र कागवेनी) हुन।

Mud forts of Panchagarh

[edit]
Cyclone landfall at Sitakunda Upazila
Date Landfall point Wind speed (KPH) Storm surge (meter) Casualties
29 May 1963 Sitakunda 200 2.4 - 3.7 11,520
12 November 1970 Sitakunda 222 3.0 – 3.1 3,00,000
29 April 1991 Kumira 225 3.6 – 6.1 1,38,000
Source: CSPS (Main Report: Part-A; table 2.2)[2]

Panchagarh is named after the five garhs or mud forts. They are Bhitargarh, Hosaingarh, Mirgarh, Rajangarh and Devengarh.

Bhitargarh Fort formed a part of the chain of early medieval mud-forts erected mostly by the Muslim rulers at different times to defend their territory against the incursion of their northern Hindu neighbours. The territory east of the Karatoya River was for sometime a part of the Ahom kingdom. In the15th century this area was included in the Tibeto-Barman Khen dynasty's territory and served as a sort of buffer state between Assam and the Muslim Kingdom of Bengal.

A survey conducted by Rakhaldas Bandyopadhyay in 1924 on the trans-Karatoya region, revealed a large number of these frontier strongholds in the district of Rangpur, Dinajpur, Jalpaiguri and the neighbouring state of Kochbihar. In these areas there are a number of places known as duars meaning doorways or fords, which a labyrinth of broad and fast flowing hill-streams intersect.

The remains of a chain of such medieval forts still survive precariously in greater Rangpur and Dinajpur districts along the Karatoya River represented by a series o low earthen mounds. Included among these are the picturesque ruins of dariyaon fort near Kantaduar in Rangpur; Bhitargarh and Ghoraghat forts in Dinajpur; Batason Fort between Karatoya and Tista; Dharmapalagarh and Mainamatirgarh near Domar and Nilphamari; Baro-Paikergarh near Belwa in Dinajpur and Gosaimari fort on the Dharla river in southern part of the Kochbihar State.

After the Muslim conquest of north Bengal in the early 13th century, the frontier of the Muslim kingdom in the north gradually extended as far as the karatoya which then was a considerably larger stream. Beyond that lay the Hindu kingdoms of northeast Bengal and Assam. To arrest Muslim penetration deeper into the northeastern territories, the Ahom and Khen kings of Kamarupa built a chain of bulwarks and mud forts along the trans-Karatoya basin. Derelict remains of some of these can still be traced in Rangpur, Dinajpur, Jalpaiguri districts and adjacent Kuch Bihar state. They include Dariyaon fort near Kantaduar, Devipur, Batason in Rangpur, Mainamatirgarh and Dharmapalagarh near Domar, Baro-Paikergarh near Belwa in Dinajpur, bhitargarh in Panchagarh, Ghoraghat Fort in Dinajpur, etc.

Archaeological heritage The existence of fifteen garhs (fortifications) has hitherto been traced of which the most noted are Bhitar Garh, Hosain Garh, Mir Garh, Rajan Garh and Deven Garh. Panchagarh is named after these five garhs. Archaeological relics include Nayani Burz (bastion), remains of Atwari zamindar-bari and that of katchari-bari of Raniganj Devottvar Estate and the temple therein, Mirzapur Shahi Mosque, Tomb of Bara Awliya, tomb of Arif Shah, Maharaja Dighi (pond) at Bhitargarh, Maidan Dighi, Mughali killah (fort) at Chandan-bari, Vadeswari temple and Boda temple.

Writers: Nazimuddin Ahmed, Nazimuddin Ahmed, Md. Sherozzaman

Bibliography Abul Kalam Md Zakaria, Bangladesher Pratnasampad, Dhaka, 1980; Nazimuddin Ahmed, Discover the Monuments of Bangladesh, Dhaka, 1984.

The iconic moment

[edit]

Sharmila Tagore's appearance in a bikini in An Evening in Paris set off a cultural wave in India[3] and the film's claim of first bikini appearance of an Indian actress remains one of its most notable aspects.[4] She also posed in a bikini for the glossy Filmfare magazine.[5][6] The costume shocked the conservative Indian audience,[7][8] but it also set a trend of bikini-clad actresses carried forward by Parveen Babi (inYeh Nazdeekiyan, 1982[9]), Zeenat Aman (inHeera Panna 1973; Qurbani, 1980[9]) and Dimple Kapadia (inBobby, 1973[9]) in the early 1970s.[10] Wearing a bikini put her name in the Indian press as one of Bollywood's ten hottest actresses of all time,[11] and was a transgression of female identity through a reversal of the state of modesty, which functions as a signifier of femininity in Bombay films.[12]

The cut

[edit]

By 1934 the swimsuit started hugging the body and had shoulder straps to lower for tanning.[13] Burlesque and vaudeville performers wore two-piece outfits in the 1920s, films of holidaymakers in Germany in the 1930s show women wearing two-piece suits,[14] and in 1932 French designer Madeleine Vionnet offered an exposed midriff in an evening gown. Mack Sennett's Bathing Beauties series (1914–1919) and Dorothy Lamour's The Hurricane (1937) also showed two-piece bathing suits.[14] In 1935 American designer Claire McCardell cut out the side panels of a maillot-style bathing suit, the bikini's forerunner.[15] But, the modern bikini was introduced by French engineer Louis Réard and separately by fashion designer Jacques Heim in Paris in 1946. Réard was a car engineer but by 1946 he was running his mother's lingerie boutique near Les Folies Bergère in Paris.[16] Heim was working on a new kind of beach costume. It comprised two pieces, the bottom large enough to cover its wearer's navel. In May 1946, he advertised it as the world's "smallest bathing suit". Réard sliced the top off the bottoms and advertised it as "smaller than the smallest swimsuit".[17][18] The idea struck him when he saw women rolling up their beachwear to get a better tan.[19]

  1. ^ Michael Vinding, The local oral tradition about the kingdom of thin grab dzong, Cambridge University
  • ^ Cyclones in Bangladesh, Bangladesh Water Development Board; Retrieved: 2008-01-28
  • ^ Stuff Reporter, "Being Sharmila, all through life", The Hindu, 2006-04-03
  • ^ Lalit Mohan Joshi & Gulzar, Derek Malcolm, Bollywood, page 20, Lucky Dissanayake, 2002, ISBN 0953703223
  • ^ B. K. Karanjia, Blundering in Wonderland‎, page 18, Vikas Publishing House, 1990, ISBN 0706949617
  • ^ Sharmila Tagore, Showbiz Legends, SantaBanta
  • ^ Various writers, Rashtriya Sahara, page 28, Sahara India Mass Communication, 2002
  • ^ Manjima Bhattacharjya, "Why the bikini is badnaam", Times of India, 2007-11-25
  • ^ a b c Avijit Ghosh, "Bollywood's unfinished revolution", The Times of India, 2006-07-02
  • ^ Stuff Reporter, "That itsy bitsy thing", Times of India, 2006-06-16
  • ^ Subhash K Jha, "Bollywood's 10 hottest actresses of all time, Times of India, 2003-01-19
  • ^ Sumita S. Chakravarty, National Identity in Indian Popular Cinema, 1947-1987‎, page 321, University of Texas Press, 1993, ISBN 0292755511
  • ^ History of the Bikini, Carnival
  • ^ a b The Bikini, Metropolitan Museum of Art
  • ^ Samantha Critchell, "Little wonder that bikinis have fit in almost from the start", The San Diego Union-Tribune, 2006-05-28
  • ^ Adam Sage, "Happy birthday: the 'shocking and immoral' bikini hits 60", The Times, 2006-04-16
  • ^ Paula Cocozza, "A little piece of history", The Guardian, 2006-06-10
  • ^ The Bikini Turns 60, 1946 to 2006: 60 Years of Bikini Bathing Beauties, Lilith E-Zine
  • ^ Kathryn Westcott, "The Bikini: Not a brief affair", BBC News, 2006-06-05
  • Annex

    [edit]

    See also: MonkeymanThePurpleMonkeyEvil MonkeyStoopid MonkeyBlnguyenThe Missing MonkeyInfinite monkey theorem in popular cultureHundredth Monkey EffectList of characters in the Super Monkey Ball seriesChinese room

    Hurricanethink's Wikibio

    1955-1969

    [edit]
    Year JM's Life JM's Films Other stars Sex and censorship Film industry
    1955 Jayne Mansfield scores roles in Pete Kelly's Blues, Hell on Frisco Bay and Illegal, in which she sings and mimics Marilyn Monroe's part in Asphalt Jungle. She appears in her first Playboy spread as Playmate of the Month (she then appears in the magazine every February until 1963). She also takes the part of Rita Marlowe wearing only a towel on Broadway in Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?. She takes part in a publicity campaign for the Howard Hughes film, Underwater!, starring Jane Russell. Hell on Frisco Bay, Female Jungle, Pete Kelly's Blues, Illegal James Dean dies. Animal Farm and 1984, two adaptation of George Orwell's novels, were toned-down under CIA initiatives. United Artists withdraws from MPAA upon disagreement on seal of approval issues. Fred Zinnemann's operettas Oklahoma! introduces the widescreen process. RKO Pictures sells its film library to TV. Walt Disney's film Lady and the Tramp becomes the first CinemaScope animation film. Marty becomes the first film adapted from TV to win a Academy Award for Best Picture. It also wins the Palme d'Or.
    1956 Mansfield meets future husband Mickey Hargitay at a restaurant. Says to the waiter: "I'll have a steak and that man on the right." 20th Century Fox buys the rights to Rock Hunter on Broadway and shuts the show down to compel Mansfield to come back to Hollywood. It also releases Mansfield's musical comedy vehicle The Girl Can't Help It, with performances by Little Richard, Abbey Lincoln and others. She receives the Theatre World Award for her performance in Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? The Girl Can't Help It Elvis Presley's first film, Love Me Tender, released. Federico Fellini's 1954 film La Strada becomes the first official winner of Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. Cecil B. DeMille makes his last film The Ten Commandments, a remake of his 1923 epic. Ampex introduces the first practical VTR equipment.
    1957 Mansfield appears in the John Steinbeck's adaptation The Wayward Bus with Joan Collins, Kiss Them for Me with Cary Grant and Suzy Parker, The Burglar and reprises her role of Rita Marlowe in the screen version of Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? with Tony Randall and Hargitay. Wins a Golden Globe for Most Promising Newcomer. Goes on a tour of Europe for 20th Century Fox. She is presented to Queen Elizabeth. She says to the Queen: "You are so beautiful." The Queen replies: "So are you." The Burglar, Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?, Kiss Them for Me Roger Vadim's ...And God Created Woman, starring sex kitten of the 1950s Brigitte Bardot, released heavily censored in the US. American International Pictures, a house of exploitation films, releases I Was a Teenage Werewolf, the first of many "I was a..." films. Frankenstein's monster appears in color for The Curse of FrankensteinbyUniversal Studios.
    1958 Divorces Paul Mansfield and marries Mickey Hargitay on the same day. Hargitay and Mansfield buys the Pink Palace. The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw comes out. Miklós Jeffrey Hargitay is born. The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw The Lana Turner scandal breaks out. Number of drive-in theaters peakes near 5,000 in the US. The Cinéma vérité techniques flourish spontaneously. The Blob, starring Steve McQueen in his first leading role, and The Fly are released. Vertigo, Alfred Hitchcock's masterpiece of obsession, and Touch of Evil, one of the last films in the film noir genre by Orson Welles, are released. Gigi wins nine Academy Awards.
    1959 Wins a Golden Laurel for the Top Female Musical Performance for her role in The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw. William Wyler's Roman epic Ben-Hur wins eleven Academy Awards. The Three Stooges make their 180th and last film Sappy Bullfighters. Walt Disney makes Sleeping Beauty, the most expensive animation film ever at a production cost of US$6 million. Experiments to put smells into films, including Smell-O-Vision and Odorama techniques.
    1960 The Loves of Hercules, co-starring Hargitay, is released, as is Too Hot to Handle. Zoltan Anthony Hargitay is born. The family appears on This Is Your Life. The Challenge, Too Hot to Handle, The Loves of Hercules Marilyn Monroe wins a Golden Globe Award as Best actress for Some Like It Hot. A number of milestone films are released, including Alfred Hitchcock's psychological horror-thriller film Psycho, the "mother" of modern horror suspense films, Michael Powell's disastrous Peeping Tom, a UK film about a voyeuristic photographer and sadistic serial murderer, Stanley Kubrick's only work for hire Spartacus, a film originally directed by Anthony Mann, Federico Fellini's masterpiece La Dolce Vita and Michelangelo Antonioni's neo-realist encore L'Avventura.
    1961 Mansfield co-stars in The George Raft Story. The George Raft Story Sophia Loren becomes the only as of 2007, actor to win the Academy Award for Best Actress for a foreign language movie - Two Women. West Side Story, film adaptation of the 1957 Broadway hit wins 10 Oscars, a record only surpassed by four movies as of 2007. NBC turns How to Marry a Millionaire to be the first film to be aired on TV.
    1962 Mansfield stars in It Happened in Athens, and she and Hargitay do a show together that's released as a record, Jayne Mansfield Busts up Las Vegas. Lykke og krone (Documentary), It Happened In Athens Marilyn Monroe dies, leaving George Cukor's film Something's Got To Give, featuring the first major Hollywood star nude on screen, unfinished. Before that she wins another Golden Globe Award as World Female Film Favorite. Victim, a UK film starring man Dirk Bogarde, is refused an MPAA seal of approval for its homosexual theme. Kubrick's Lolita, based on Vladimir Nabokov's controversial novel, is threatened with a denial of seal of approval. Dr. No becomes the first successful Bond movie and Ursula Andress creates sensation in a bikini as the first Bond girl.
    1963 Mansfield does the first nude scene in a mainstream American movie in Promises! Promises!. Stills from the movie run in Playboy magazine and gets the publisher Hugh Hefner arrested for the only as of 2007, time in his life on indecency charges. Jayne also appears in Homesick for St. Pauli. Homesick for St. Pauli, Promises! Promises! American International releases Beach Party, the first of their sexploitative comedy "beach party" films. Cleopatra, starring Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, one of the most expensive films. Ampex brings out the first VTR set for common consumers.
    1964 Mariska Magdolna is born. Divorces Mickey Hargitay. Marries director Matt Cimber. Mansfield films an episode of the TV show Burke's Law, does a summer stock production of Bus Stop, appears in the films L'Amor Primitivo, Dog Eat Dog! and Panic Button, and tours in a theatrical version of Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. Primitive Love, Panic Button, Dog Eat Dog Michelangelo Antonioni makes the Red Desert, his first film in color using the newly perfected telephoto lens. The Beatles releases A Hard Day's Night , a mockumentary and the first film of the band. NBC and Universal Studios produce and broadcast See How They Run, the first feature length film made for TV. Sony markets the first reel-to-reel VTR specifically for home use.
    1965 Antonio Raphael Ottaviano Cimber is born. The Loved One (Scenes deleted) The Catholic Church's Legion of Decency condemns Sidney Lumet's film The Pawnbroker for bold depiction of actress Thelma Oliver's bare breasts. Woody Allen meets success with his first screenplay What's New Pussycat?, a sex farce. Director John Lamb's nudist film The Raw Ones openly shows genitalia. The Sound of Music, film adaptation of the 1959 Broadway musical, surpasses Gone With the Wind as the number one box office hit of all time and wins five Academy Awards including Best Picture and Best Director.
    1966 Mansfield divorces Matt Cimber. Stars in The Fat Spy with Phyllis Diller, and has a cameo in Las Vegas Hillbillys with Mamie Van Doren. She gives birth to her fifth child Antonio. She plays to a sold-out house at New York's Latin Quarter nightclub for two months. The Las Vegas Hillbillys, The Fat Spy The Hays Code is revised to remove prohibitions of lustful kissing and passion that stimulates the base emotions, and to permit certain films to be labeled recommended for mature audiences. Swinging UK film Georgy Girl released as the first suggested for mature audiences film under the new code. At Warner Bros.'s appeal MPAA allows the seal of approval for the Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, the first US film recommended for mature audiences, despite profane expletives and frank sexual content. MGM distributes Michelangelo Antonioni's Blowup, the director's first non-Italian feature, featuring teenaged groupies, full-frontal nudity and pubic hair. Legion of Decency changed its official name to the National Catholic Office for Motion Pictures. Academy Awards ceremony broadcast in color. ABC buys airing rights of The Bridge on the River Kwai for a record US$2 million.
    1967 Mansfield has a cameo in A Guide for the Married Man starring Walter Matthau. She dies in a car accident on Highway 90 near Slidell, Louisiana. The car crashes into a truck and slides under it. The three adults in the front seat are killed. Mansfield's children, including Mariska, are sleeping in the backseat and survive the accident. Mariska Hargitay has a scar on her head from the accident, but has no memory of the event. A private funderal is held in Pen Argyl, Pennsylvania. A Guide for the Married Man, Spree (1967) (documentary), Mondo Hollywood (Documentary) The first "spaghetti western", A Fistful of Dollars, directed by Sergio Leone and starring Clint Eastwood as "the man with no name" is released. Arthur Penn's film Bonnie and Clyde becomes a hit featuring anti-heroes. Mike Nichols is paid a record US$1,000,000 to direct The Graduate, starring Dustin Hoffman. New Line Cinema is born. In the Heat of the Night becomes the first Best Picture Academy Award winner film to be adopted as a TV series. Sony introduces the first out-of-studio video camera.
    1968 The Wild, Wild World of Jayne Mansfield and Single Room Furnished are released posthumously. The Wild, Wild World of Jayne Mansfield (Documentary; Posthumous), Single Room Furnished (Posthumous) A new voluntary rating system was introduced by MPAA, with four categories - G (general audiences), M (mature audiences), R (no one under 16 admitted without an adult guardian) and X (no one under 17 admitted). Mädchen in Uniform, a 1931 German film, becomes the first film released in the US with a lesbian theme. Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey reinvents the science fiction genre. Work begins for Midnight Cowboy, starring Dustin Hoffman, the only X-rated picture to win a Best Picture Academy Award as of 2007.

    Source

    [edit]
    Corresponding events
    JM's bios

    Jayne Marie em ensaio fotográfico para a Revista Homem de setembro de 1976 (Jayne Marie on trial for Photographic Magazine Man of September, 1976)

    <div id="title-override" class="topicon" style="font-size: 188%; padding-top: 0.5em; padding-bottom: 0.1em; float: left; position: absolute; left: 0.5em; top: 1px; width: 90%; background: {{#ifeq:{{PAGENAME}}|{{FULLPAGENAME}}|white|#F8FCFF}}; display:none">[[Jayne Mansfield]]</div>

    Kolkata (or Calcutta) is the fourth most populous city in India,[1] and by 2007 estimates it is one of the top 15 most populous urban agglomerations in the world.[2] Kolkata features a number of records for India and the rest of the world, ranging from the largest banyan tree to the oldest golf course in India. It also was a home to some of the most prominent characters in India and the world. In the 19th century, Kolkata was the British Empire's second biggest city after London. As late as the 1950s, it was among the top ten largest cities in the world.[3]

    Ranking

    [edit]

    Kolkata in history

    [edit]

    People of Kolkata

    [edit]

    Sports and leisure

    [edit]

    Science and technology

    [edit]

    Animals and plants

    [edit]

    Food and beverage

    [edit]

    Kolkata and other cities

    [edit]

    Notes

    [edit]
  • ^ a b "Demographia World Urban Areas Projections 2007 & 2020" (PDF). Demographia. Retrieved 2008-04-24.
  • ^ Top 10 largest cities of the year 1950 (population), All Rankings
  • ^ Largest cities and urban areas in 2006 (1 to 100), City Mayors
  • ^ Largest cities in the world ranked by population (1 to 125), City Mayors
  • ^ Cities ranked 1 to 100, City Mayors
  • ^ Largest cities in the world ranked by population density (1 to 125), City Mayors
  • ^ Largest cities in the world ranked by land area (126 to 250), City Mayors
  • ^ Fastest growing cities and urban areas (101 to 200), City Mayors
  • ^ Richest cities and urban areas in 2005, City Mayors
  • ^ Warming risks listed by population, costs, MSNBC
  • ^ Magindia article on History of advertising in Indian media
  • ^ "About the U.S. Consulate General, Kolkata". U.S. Department of State. Retrieved 2008-04-24.
  • ^ "History of Indian museum". The Indian Museum of Kolkata. Retrieved 2006-04-23.
  • ^ "History of the Indian Museum Kolkata". Indian Museum Kolkata. Retrieved 2008-04-25.
  • ^ The Calcutta Kitchen
  • ^ "National cinema and the beginning of film history in/of Bangladesh". La Trobe University - Melbourne, Australia. Retrieved 2008-04-24.
  • ^ Pradyumna Prasad Karan, The Non-western World: Environment, Development and Human Rights, page 359, Routledge, 2004, ISBN 0415947138
  • ^ "History Section: Golf's Roots". Thinkquest.org. Retrieved 2008-04-25.
  • ^ Raju, Mukherji (March 14, 2005). "Seven Years? Head Start". The Telegraph. Retrieved 2006-10-26. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  • ^ Of squash, sweat and soda, The Telegraph
  • ^ Calcutta Club's first women members, Times of India
  • ^ Eden Garden on cricketclub.org
  • ^ Eden Garden on cricketweb.net
  • ^ "India - Eden Gardens (Kolkata)". Cricket Web. Retrieved 2006-10-26.
  • ^ "Ross and the Discovery that Mosquitoes Transmit Malaria Parasites". Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Retrieved 2008-04-24.
  • ^ "Sir William Siemens (1823-1883)" (PDF). Siemens AG. Retrieved 2008-04-25.
  • ^ "Heritage". Medical College & Hospital Kolkata. Retrieved 2008-04-25.
  • ^ "It's official: Kanupriya's India's first test-tube girl". Diligent Media Corp. Retrieved 2008-04-24.
  • ^ "IVF son for single Indian father". BBC. Retrieved 2008-04-24.
  • ^ "General Information". Birla Industrial and Technological Museum. Retrieved 2008-04-25.
  • ^ "Eureka! New tallest living thing discovered". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2008-04-25.
  • ^ "Gardening World Records". LetsGoGardening.co.uk. Retrieved 2008-04-25.
  • ^ "Kolkata toasts 255-year-old resident". Sify News. Retrieved 2008-04-25.
  • ^ Tomlinson, Thom. India Pale Ale, Part I:IPA and Empire--Necessity and Enterprise give Birth to a Style
  • ^ Tea and technology mix in Calcutta, BBC News
  • ^ "Online Directory: California, USA". Sister Cities International. Retrieved 2008-04-24.
  • ^ "Singing Sheriff". Living Media India Ltd. Retrieved 2008-04-24.
  • ^ Howrah, Encyclopedia Britannica Online
  • List of Kolkata facts List of Kolkata Facts Kolkata

    The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


    GorbachevChernenkoAndropovBrezhnevKhrushchevTheatre World AwardThe Girl Can't Help ItMickey HargitayWill Success Spoil Rock Hunter?Playmate of the Month

    Regions

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    Russia

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    East

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    North

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    Central

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    West

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    South

    [edit]

    China

    [edit]

    Urban

    [edit]

    Inner

    [edit]

    Outer

    [edit]

    Indochina

    [edit]

    India

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    East

    [edit]

    West

    [edit]

    Middle

    [edit]

    North

    [edit]

    South

    [edit]

    External

    [edit]

    Pacific

    [edit]

    North

    [edit]

    Australasia

    [edit]

    Oceania

    [edit]

    Persia

    [edit]

    East

    [edit]

    Middle

    [edit]

    West

    [edit]

    Eurasia

    [edit]

    Turkey

    [edit]

    Kurdistan

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    Caucasus

    [edit]

    Levant

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    Coastal

    [edit]

    Inland

    [edit]

    Offshore

    [edit]

    Arabia

    [edit]

    North

    [edit]

    Middle

    [edit]

    South

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    Asia Africa

    [edit]

    North

    [edit]

    Ethiopia

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    South

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    Africa

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    East

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    Notes

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  • ^ Severo Baykalsky-Muysky-Bauntovsky
  • ^ Tuguro Chumikansky-Ayano Maysky-Okhotsky
  • ^ Kamchatka-Magadan
  • ^ Including North Karelia
  • ^ Kaliningrad, Klaipėda, Tauragė
  • ^ Kharkiv, Dnipropetrovsk, Zaporizhia
  • ^ Also Manchuria
  • ^ East Altai-West Altai
  • ^ Also Outer Manchuria
  • ^ Including Paracel
  • ^ Also Dutch East Indies/Maritime Southeast Asia
  • ^ Including Bangka-Belitung
  • ^ Including Kalimantan, Brunei-Labuan, Sabah-Sarawak, Riau-Lingga/Riau Islands
  • ^ East Tenggara, West Tenggara
  • ^ Also North-East
  • ^ Northern Shan, Southern Shan
  • ^ Kayah-Kayin-Tak
  • ^ Gwadar, Kech, Panjgur, Mand
  • ^ Including Wakhan Corridor
  • ^ Also Malakand-Swat: Chitral, Swāt, Dir, Kohistān, Malakand, Buner, Shangla
  • ^ Including FR Peshawar
  • ^ Nuristan, Kunar, Khyber, Bajaur-Mohmand
  • ^ Kabul, Parwan, Panjshir, Kapisa, Laghman
  • ^ Bamyan, Daykundi, Urozgan
  • ^ Including Diqing, Garzê, Golog
  • ^ Including Khasansky
  • ^ Aleutian, Aleutsky
  • ^ Including Johnston Atoll, Midway Atoll, Baker Island-Howland Island
  • ^ Also Fujian-Taiwan
  • ^ Including Guam, North Marianas
  • ^ Ashmore-Cartier, Jervis
  • ^ Including Norfolk, Kermadec, Three Kings
  • ^ Including Stewart, Chatham, Ruapuke-Solander-Snares
  • ^ Cook, Niue, Tokelau
  • ^ Including Furneaux Group, Kent Group, King Island
  • ^ Auckland-Campbell, Macquarie, Bounty-Antipodes
  • ^ Also New Guinea
  • ^ Leeward Islands, Windward Islands
  • ^ Palmyra, Kingman, Jarvis
  • ^ Helmand, Kandahar, Zabul
  • ^ Nok Kundi-Dalbandin
  • ^ Quetta-East Pishin/West Pishin, Killa Abdullah, Ziarat
  • ^ North Waziristan, South Waziristan
  • ^ Abbottabad, Battagram-Allai, Haripur, Mansehra, Torghar, Amb, Phulra
  • ^ Kohat-FR Kohat-Hangu, Karak, Darra Adam Khel
  • ^ Nowshera, Charsadda, Mardan-Swabi
  • ^ Bannu-FR Bannu, Lakki Marwat-FR Lakki Marwat
  • ^ Dera Ismail Khan, Tank-FR Tank
  • ^ Paktika, Khost, Paktia, Kurram Valley
  • ^ Zhob-Sherani, Killa Saifullah, Musakhel, Loralai
  • ^ Also Hyrcania/Tabaristan
  • ^ Also Persia
  • ^ Oshnavieh, Piranshahr, Mahabad, Sardasht, Bukan
  • ^ Shekhan, Tel Keppe, Aqrah, Tel Afar
  • ^ Also Rojava
  • ^ Ras al-Ayn, Al-Darbasiyah, Amuda, Al-Qamishli, Al-Qahtaniyah, Al-Jawadiyah, Al-Malikiyah
  • ^ Jarabulus, Ayn al-Arab, Tell Abyad
  • ^ Afrin, Azaz
  • ^ Also OHAL
  • ^ Also Alania
  • ^ Adygea-Mostovsky, Karachay-Cherkessia, Kabardino-Balkaria, Predgorny-Kirovsky
  • ^ Including Posof, Çıldır, Hanak, Damal, Şavşat, Borçka, Hopa
  • ^ North Ossetia-Alania, South Ossetia
  • ^ Including East Jerusalem
  • ^ Also Hauran
  • ^ Including Tiran Island, Sanafir Island
  • ^ Karak Governorate, Tafilah Governorate, Ma'an Governorate
  • ^ Amman Governorate, Zarqa Governorate
  • ^ Irbid Governorate, Ajloun Governorate, Jerash Governorate, Mafraq Governorate
  • ^ Also Habesh
  • ^ Including An Nu'ayriyah
  • ^ Greater and Lesser Tunbs, Abu Musa, Faror island
  • ^ Including Ra's al Ju'aymah
  • ^ Including Arabi Island, Farsi Island
  • ^ Also British Somaliland
  • ^ Italian Somaliland
  • ^ French Somaliland
  • ^ Aden, Hadhramaut, South Yemen
  • ^ Aqrabi, Colony of Aden
  • ^ Kamaran, Perim, Khuriya Muriya
  • ^ Also Yemen, Sheba, North Yemen
  • ^ Including Lower Aulaqi Sultanate, Upper Aulaqi Sultanate, Upper Aulaqi Sheikhdom
  • ^ Qu'aiti, Yafa (Upper/Lower), Kathiri
  • ^ Also Anglo-Egyptian Sudan
  • ^ Also Maghreb/Ifriqiya
  • ^ Also Songhai-Kanem/West Sudan-Upper Senegal
  • ^ Including Gomera, Alhucemas
  • ^ Including Strait of Gibraltar crossing
  • ^ Including Bas-Congo
  • ^ Including Kinkala
  • ^ Including Logone Occidental, Logone Oriental
  • ^ Also Slave Coast
  • ^ Also Jolof/Guinea
  • ^ Also Benin
  • ^ Also Great Lakes

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