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Jol Gujarat
Jol or JOL may refer to: People * Cornelis Jol (1597–1641), Dutch corsair and admiral during the Eighty Years' War * Dick Jol (born 1956), Dutch football referee * Jutta Jol (1896–1981), German actress * Martin Jol (born 1956), Dutch football manager and former player * Jol Dantzig, American artist and musician Places * Cherchell, Algeria; a town with the Roman Era name Jol * Jol, Iran; a village * Jolo Airport (IATA airport code JOL), Sulu, Philippines Events * Jól (Iceland), the Christmas holiday season in Iceland * Yule (jól), an ancient Germanic winter celebration Other uses * Jol, a kind of embroidered Kilim A kilim ( ; ; ) is a flat tapestry-weaving, woven carpet or rug traditionally produced in countries of the former Persian Empire, including Iran and Turkey, but also in the Balkans and the Turkic countries. Kilims can be purely decorative ... flatweave rug for use as a horse saddle * ''Jol'' (film), a 2001 Kazakhstani drama * '' Journal of Luminesc ...
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Cornelis Jol
Cornelis Corneliszoon Jol (baptised 9 January 1597 – 31 October 1641), nicknamed ''Houtebeen'' ("pegleg"), was a 17th-century Dutch corsair and admiral in the Dutch West India Company during the Eighty Years' War between Spain and the Dutch Republic. He was one of several early buccaneers to attack Campeche, looting the settlement in 1633, and was active against the Spanish in the Spanish Main and throughout the Caribbean during the 1630s and 40s. Jol was really more of a pirate (or rather privateer) than an admiral, raiding Spanish and Portuguese fleets and gathering large amounts of loot. When he was young he lost a leg for some unknown reason. He was therefore nicknamed ''Houtebeen'' (''Perna de Pau'' in Portuguese and ''Pie de Palo'' in Spanish), and became one of the earliest documented pirates to use a wooden peg leg. The Spanish also nicknamed him ''El Pirata''. Biography Cornelis Jol hailed from the fishing borough of Scheveningen, administratively a part of The Hag ...
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Dick Jol
Dick Jol (born 29 March 1956) is a Dutch former football referee, best known for supervising three matches during the 2000 UEFA European Football Championship held in Belgium and the Netherlands. Early life Born in Scheveningen, South Holland, Jol started as a footballer. A forward, played several matches for NEC Nijmegen in the Dutch league, before moving on to Belgium where he played for the teams like Menen, Berchem Sport and KV Kortrijk. Career Jol was the referee of the 2000 FIFA Club World Championship final between Corinthians and Vasco da Gama. He was the referee in charge of the friendly International match between the Republic of Ireland and England at Lansdowne Road in 1995, which was abandoned due to violent disorder from England supporters. He officiated his first international A-match in 1993 and his last official match in 2001, when he reached the FIFA age limit of 45. Jol was assigned the 2001 UEFA Champions League Final between Bayern Munich and Valencia, in whi ...
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Jutta Jol
Jutta Jol (4 February 1896 – 26 October 1981) was a German actress. Born Justine Jutta Blanda Hermine Gehrmann in Metz, Lothringen German Reich (now, Lorraine, France), she died in Berlin. Selected filmography * '' Lord Reginald's Derby Ride'' (1924) * ''Rosenmontag'' (1924) * '' Vacation from Marriage'' (1927) * '' The Serfs'' (1928) * '' Whirl of Youth'' (1928) * '' The Smuggler's Bride of Mallorca'' (1929) * '' Wellen der Leidenschaft'' (1930) * '' Regine'' (1935) * '' The Yellow Flag'' (1937) * '' Mädchen für alles'' (1937) * ''The Divine Jetta ''The Divine Jetta'' () is a 1937 German musical comedy film directed by Erich Waschneck and starring Grethe Weiser, Viktor de Kowa, and Marina von Ditmar. Cast References Bibliography * External links * 1937 films 1930s ...'' (1937) * '' The Tiger of Eschnapur'' (1938) * '' The Indian Tomb'' (1938) External links * 1896 births 1981 deaths German film actresses German silent film actresses Ac ...
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Martin Jol
Maarten Cornelis "Martin" Jol (born 16 January 1956) is a Dutch football manager and former midfielder. He played over 400 games during his career which included spells in the Netherlands, Germany and England, as well as earning three caps with the Netherlands national team. He subsequently became a manager and has worked for Roda JC, RKC Waalwijk and Ajax in his homeland, as well as German Bundesliga club Hamburger SV and English Premier League clubs Tottenham Hotspur and Fulham and Egypt's Al Ahly. Playing career Jol was born in The Hague. He started his playing career with an amateur team before joining the local professional side ADO Den Haag. He turned professional with Den Haag in 1973. He won the 1975 Dutch Cup with the team defeating Twente. He played in the Bundesliga for the 1978–79 season with Bayern Munich before returning to the Dutch Eredivisie to play for Twente in 1979. While with Twente, he won his first cap for the Netherlands national football ...
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Jol Dantzig
Jolyon C. Dantzig (Jol Dantzig) is an American artist, songwriter, designer, guitarist, luthier, author and one of the founders of Hamer Guitars. Biography Born in Chicago, Jolyon (Jol) Dantzig began playing guitar and piano in grade school. He studied guitar with local teachers, most notably local blues guitarist Michael Bloomfield. Dantzig attended Evanston Township High School where he studied photography. Dantzig continued his art education at the Art Institute of Chicago. While still in his early twenties, he became a touring musician, playing guitar, bass and singing in numerous rock and R&B bands. Dantzig also supported himself by buying and selling used guitars and running a band equipment rental company. Beginning in 1969 Dantzig took a number of factory jobs to supplement his income. This provided the opportunity to learn about how manufacturing plants operated. Other jobs included machining, woodworking, shipping and electronics. More experience included working as a ma ...
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Cherchell
Cherchell () is a town on Algeria's Mediterranean coast, west of Algiers. It is the seat of Cherchell District in Tipaza Province. Under the names Iol and Caesarea, it was formerly a Roman colony and the capital of the kingdoms of Numidia and Mauretania. Names The town was originally known by a Phoenician and Punic name that included the element (), meaning "island". Yol is often attributed to the name of a local divinity of the sea as the word "''Ilel'' / ''Yelel" in local etymology'' meaning sea in Tamazight. This may have been , meaning "Island of Sand". The Punic name was hellenized as ''Iṑl'' (Greek language:Ἰὼλ) and latinized as Iol. The modern name Cherchel and Cherchell are French transcriptions of the berber word ''Šaršār'' (''Achercher'') to signify "Waterfall".. The modern name may have derived from the town's old Latin name Caesarea (Greek language: ἡ Καισάρεια, ''hē Kaisáreia''), the name given by the ruler Juba II. to honor ...
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Jol, Iran
Jol () is a village in Chaybasar-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Maku County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran Iran, officially the Islamic Republic of Iran (IRI) and also known as Persia, is a country in West Asia. It borders Iraq to the west, Turkey, Azerbaijan, and Armenia to the northwest, the Caspian Sea to the north, Turkmenistan to the nort .... At the 2006 census, its population was 32, in 7 families. References Populated places in Maku County {{Maku-geo-stub ...
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Jolo Airport
Jolo Airport is an airport serving the general area of Jolo, located in the province of Sulu, Philippines. It is the only airport in the province of Sulu. The airport is classified as a Class 2 principal (minor domestic) airport by the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines, a body of the Department of Transportation that is responsible for the operations of not only this airport but also of all other airports in the Philippines except the major international airports. History Jolo Airport was constructed in the 1940s during World War II as a staging point for American fighter aircraft. At the time, it had a 1,000-meter runway.P232M earmarked for Jolo airport
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Jól (Iceland)
Christmas in Iceland (''Jól'') starts four weeks before proper Christmas, which begins on 24 December (''Aðfangadagur'') and ends thirteen days later on 6 January (''Þrettándinn'', coinciding with Epiphany). Traditionally, one candle is lit each Sunday, until four candles are lit on the 24th. At 6:00 p.m. church bells ring to start the Christmas celebration. The religiously observant and/or traditional Icelanders will attend mass at this time, while the secular Icelanders will begin their holiday meal immediately. After the meal is finished, they open gifts and spend the evening together. In Iceland people over the Yule holidays most often eat smoked lamb, ptarmigan, and turkey. Pork is also very popular. Thirteen days before 24 December, children will leave their shoes by a window so that the 13 Yule Lads ('' jólasveinarnir'') can leave small gifts in their shoes. The Yule Lads are the sons of two trolls, Grýla and Leppalúði, living in the Icelandic mountains. Each o ...
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Yule
Yule is a winter festival historically observed by the Germanic peoples that was incorporated into Christmas during the Christianisation of the Germanic peoples. In present times adherents of some new religious movements (such as Modern Germanic paganism) celebrate Yule independently of the Christian festival. Scholars have connected the original celebrations of Yule to the Wild Hunt, the god Odin, and the heathen Anglo-Saxon ("Mothers' Night"). The term ''Yule'' and cognates are still used in English and the Scandinavian languages as well as in Finnish and Estonian to describe Christmas and other festivals occurring during the winter holiday season. Furthermore, some present-day Christmas customs and traditions such as the Yule log, Yule goat, Yule boar, Yule singing, and others may have connections to older pagan Yule traditions. Etymology The modern English noun ''Yule'' descends from Old English , earlier ''geoh(h)ol'', ''geh(h)ol'', and ''geóla'', sometime ...
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Kilim
A kilim ( ; ; ) is a flat tapestry-weaving, woven carpet or rug traditionally produced in countries of the former Persian Empire, including Iran and Turkey, but also in the Balkans and the Turkic countries. Kilims can be purely decorative or can function as prayer rugs. Modern kilims are popular floor coverings in Western households. Etymology The word 'kilim' originates from the Persian language, Persian () where it means 'to spread roughly', perhaps of Akkadian language, Akkadian or Aramaic, Aramean origin. History Like Pile weave, pile carpets, kilim have been produced since ancient times. The explorer Aurel Stein, Mark Aurel Stein found kilims dating to at least the fourth or fifth century CE in Hotan, China: :"As kilims are much less durable than rugs that have a pile to protect the warp and weft, it is not surprising that few of great age remain.... The Weaving, weave is almost identical with that of modern kilims, and has about fourteen threads of warp and sixt ...
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Jol (film)
''The Road'' () is a 2001 list of Kazakhstani films, Kazakhstani drama film directed by Darezhan Omirbaev. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival. Cast * Jamshed Usmonov - Amir Kobessov * Saule Toktybayeva - Amir's mother * Alnur Turgambayeva - Amir's wife * Magjane Omirbayev - Amir's son / Amir as a child * Valeria Gouliaeva - Veronika, the waitress * Valeri Skoribov - Censorship agent * Moukhamedjane Alpisbaev - Amir's school friend * Serik Aprimov - The avenging brother References External links

* 2001 films Kazakh-language films 2001 drama films Films directed by Darezhan Omirbaev Kazakhstani drama films {{Kazakhstan-film-stub ...
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