Kula Sanitarium
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Kula Sanitarium
Kula may refer to: People *Bob Kula (born 1967), American football player * Elisabeth Kula (born 1990), German politician * Irwin Kula (born 1957), American rabbi and author *Karel Kula (born 1963), Czech footballer Places * Kula, Bihać, a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina * Kula (Bugojno), a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina * Kula, Busovača, a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina * Kula, Konjic, a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina * Kula (Sokolac), a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina * Kula, Travnik, a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina * Kula, Zenica, a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina * Kula, Bulgaria, a town and municipality in Vidin Province, Bulgaria * Kula, Croatia, a village in Požega-Slavonia County, Croatia * Kula, Ethiopia, a town in Ethiopia * Kula Eco Park, a zoological park near Sigatoka, Fiji * Kula, Iran, a village in East Azerbaijan Province, Iran * Kula, Serbia, a town and municipality in Vojvodina, Serbia * Kula (volcano), a volcanic field in Turkey * ...
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Bob Kula
Robert Martin Kula (born August 24, 1967) is an American former college football offensive lineman who played for the Michigan State Spartans. He was selected by the Seattle Seahawks in the seventh round of the 1990 NFL draft. He played with the Montreal Machine of the World League of American Football (WLAF). Early life Robert Martin Kula was born on August 24, 1967, in Detroit, Michigan. He attended Brother Rice High School in Bloomfield Township, Oakland County, Michigan. College career Kula was a four-year letterman for the Michigan State Spartans of Michigan State University from 1986 to 1989. He was a consensus All-American and the Big Ten Offensive Lineman of the Year in 1989 as an offensive tackle. He earned Associated Press (AP) and United Press International (UPI) second-team All-Big Ten Conference honors in 1988, and AP and UPI first-team All-Big Ten honors in 1989. Professional career Kula was selected by the Seattle Seahawks in the seventh round, with the 175th ...
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Kula (volcano)
Kula is a volcanic field located in western Turkey. Kula field consists of a broad area of cinder cones and maars. It is the westernmost volcano of Turkey. The volcanic character of the area was recognized in antiquity, when it was named Katakekaumene (the burned lands) from the appearance of the environment, which was mostly suited for viticulture. Volcanism began in the Miocene and over three stages continued in the Holocene. It is associated with the presence of two neighboring active graben structures. Footprints of prehistoric humans have been found in the area. The area is a Kula Geopark, geopark recognized by UNESCO given the universal and scientific value. Geography The volcanic field is located in Kula, Manisa, Kula, Manisa Province. It is 65 km west of Uşak and 130 km east of İzmir. It is located on the northern side of the Gediz River, Gediz Graben, while the Bozdağ mountain range is on the southern side. The current cones are mostly of small size and one of the ...
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Bai Brands
Bai Brands is a beverage company founded in 2009 in Princeton, New Jersey, by entrepreneur Ben Weiss. Weiss started Bai after he learned about the coffeefruit – the fruit that surrounds the outside of the coffee bean — and decided to use it to create a new brand of beverages. The company offers a line of low-calorie soft drinks (including sodas, bottled water, iced tea, and non-carbonated fruit-flavored drinks) sweetened with erythritol and rebaudioside A (stevia leaf extract), ascorbic acid, and extract from ''coffea'' fruit harvested in Indonesia; its flavors typically are identified by the name of an exotic locale along with the natural fruit flavor used. Its flagship product is Bai Antioxidant Infusions. In 2015, it launched a brand of bottled water called Bai Antiwater. By 2015, Bai was named one of “America’s Most Promising Companies” by ''Forbes.'' In 2016, entertainer Justin Timberlake invested in Bai and became the brand’s “chief flavor officer.” On Nov ...
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Tower Houses In The Balkans
Tower houses ( ; , ; , ) developed and were built since the Middle Ages in the Balkans,Greville Pounds 1994p. 335 "In southeastern Europe, where the extended family was exemplified as nowhere else in the western world, the home itself was often protected, giving rise to the kula or tower- house." particularly in Albania, Kosovo and Montenegro, but also in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Greece, North Macedonia and Serbia, as well as in Oltenia, in Romania. Originating from the Mediterranean-Medieval stone tower houses, they were developed by Albanians, Albanian carpenter-mason craftsmanship, which had a strong reputation within the Ottoman as well as the European elites for the construction of advanced residential housing. Mid-19th century studies pointed out that all the men – almost without exception – who build walls, fell trees and saw lumber in the European part of the Ottoman Empire and in the Kingdom of Greece, were from Albania, specifically from mountainous regions ...
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Kula Tribe (Rivers State)
The Kula tribe of the Ijaw people lives in Akuku Toru Local Government Area, southwestern Rivers State, Nigeria. The Kula people were not originally speaking Kalabari as their language but has lost their real language due to war alliance, trade and close interactions with the Kalabaris. The small Kalabari-speaking tribe is sometimes classified as a Kalabari community rather than as its own tribe. The tribal seat is the town of Kula inmernated from Opu-Kula as it aborigine founded and established by its founding fathers. Location and geographical setting Kula is situated in the south western axis of Rivers State of Nigeria - under the Akuku-Toru Local Government Area of Rivers State. Its geographical coordinates are latitude 4.34139 and longitude 6.64611. It is a low-lying coastal area in the mangrove swamp region of the Niger Delta, with a few feet above the mean sea level, located very close to the Atlantic Ocean. The area is drained by a network of rivers such as San Batholom ...
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Kula Tribe (Australia)
The Kula, also known as the Kurnu, were an indigenous Australian people of the state of New South Wales. Country The Kula are estimated by Tindale to have held sway over roughly of territory, predominantly on the western side of the Darling River, running from near Bourke to Dunlop. They were also around the Warrego River The Warrego River is an intermittent river that is part of the Darling catchment within the Murray–Darling basin, which is located in South West Queensland and in the Orana region of New South Wales, Australia. The Warrego River is the north ... and at Enngonia and Barringun on the border with Queensland. Their western reach ran close to Yantabulla. Alternative names * ''Cornu'' * ''Gu:nu'' * ''Guemo'' * ''Guno, Gunu'' * ''Komu'' * ''Koonoo'' * ''Kornoo'' * ''Kumu'' (language name applied to the Kula but also to other Darling River tribes) * ''Kuno'' * ''Noolulgo'' Source: Some words * ''thirlta'' (kangaroo) * ''karle/kulli'' (dog) Notes Citati ...
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Kula People (Asia)
The Kula people (; , ; also spelt Gula and Kola) are the descendants of migrants from Burma who settled in the Pailin- Chanthaburi region along the Cambodia–Thailand border during the 19th century. To which Burmese ethnic group the Kulas belong remains uncertain, with some speculating a Bamar, Shan or multi-ethnic heritage. Terminology The term Kula appears to be referring to a variety of Burmese ethnicities forming a community in regions along the border between Cambodia and Thailand. Indeed Thai documents from the 1870s and 1880s use the words ''Toongsoo'' ( ''Taungthu'' in Burmese) and ''Kula'' interchangeably. ''Toongsoo'' (or ''Tongsú'') was used in the 19th century as a designation for the Karen tribe in general, but also for a Tai trader tribe closely related to Shans known for dealing in elephant and horses. The Shan pronunciation of the Burmese word ''taungthu'' "hill man", refers to the Pa'O, an ethnic group within the Karen people. Kula also refers to mine ...
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Kula Language (Bantu)
Kula (''Likula'') is a Bantu language The Bantu languages (English: , Proto-Bantu language, Proto-Bantu: *bantʊ̀), or Ntu languages are a language family of about 600 languages of Central Africa, Central, Southern Africa, Southern, East Africa, Eastern and Southeast Africa, South ... of the Democratic Republic of Congo. References Buja-Ngombe languages Languages of the Democratic Republic of the Congo {{Bantu-lang-stub ...
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Kula Language
Kula (Kola) or Lamtoka (Lantoka), also known as Tanglapui, is a Papuan language spoken in villages on the north coast, south coast and mountainous interior of Alor Island in Indonesia Indonesia, officially the Republic of Indonesia, is a country in Southeast Asia and Oceania, between the Indian Ocean, Indian and Pacific Ocean, Pacific oceans. Comprising over List of islands of Indonesia, 17,000 islands, including Sumatra, .... Dialects are Kula proper, Kulatela, Watena, Kula Watena, Iramang, Larena, Sumang, and Arumaka. Most settlements where Kula is spoken are "new villages" that have only been inhabited since the 1960s. Due to this recent resettlement, and since usage of the language is discouraged in schools, Kula is an endangered language. Phonology The data in this section are taken from Williams (2017). Phonemes in brackets are "marginal phonemes". Consonants Vowels References External links * ELAR archive oDocumenting Language and Interaction in Kula T ...
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Kaula (Hinduism)
Kaula, also known as Kula, ("the Kula path") and ("the Kaula tradition"), is a Tantra, Tantric tradition which is characterised by distinctive rituals and symbolism connected with the worship of Shakti and Shiva that is associated with cremation-ground or charnel ground asceticism, found in Shaktism and Shaivism. Different types of Kulacharam were practiced in Assam, Kashmir, Bengal, Tripura and Kerala as it's primary worships. Kaula preserves some of the distinctive features of the ''Kapalika, Kāpālika'' tradition, from which it is derived. It is subdivided into four subcategories of texts based on the goddesses Kuleśvarī, Kubjikā, Kālī, and Tripura Sundari, Tripurasundarī respectively. The Trika texts are closely related to the Kuleśvarī texts and can be considered as a 'domesticized' part of the Kulamārga. These subcategories emerged as cults with a wide range of practices—some with mild practices involving worship of Siva or Sadasiva as a householder deity wh ...
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Kula (unit)
A kula is an obsolete unit of measurement. *In India, it was a unit of land area. After metrication in the mid-20th century, the unit became obsolete. *In Morocco, it was a unit of mass equal to 22 rotal, or 11.165 kg (24.61458 lb) See also *List of customary units of measurement in South Asia The origins of the customary units of measurement in South Asia are varied. As in Europe, there were various local systems of everyday measurements of length, mass and dry volume (the latter being a ''de facto'' measure of mass for many staple g ... References Units of area Units of mass Customary units in India Obsolete units of measurement {{measurement-stub, 2 ...
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Kula Ring
Kula, also known as the Kula exchange or Kula ring, is a ceremonial exchange system conducted in the Milne Bay Province of Papua New Guinea. The Kula ring was made famous by Bronisław Malinowski, considered the father of modern anthropology. He used this test case to argue for the universality of rational decision-making and for the cultural nature of the object of their effort. Malinowski's seminal work on the topic, '' Argonauts of the Western Pacific'' (1922), directly confronted the question, "Why would men risk life and limb to travel across huge expanses of dangerous ocean to give away what appear to be worthless trinkets?" Malinowski carefully traced the network of exchanges of bracelets and necklaces across the Trobriand Islands, and established that they were part of a system of exchange (the Kula ring), and that this exchange system was clearly linked to political authority. Malinowski's study became the subject of debate with the French anthropologist, Marcel Mauss, a ...
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