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Pare
Pare may refer to: People with the name * Emmett Paré (1907-1973), tennis player * Pare, former member of Kotak, an Indonesian band * Pare Lorentz (1905-1992), American film director * Richard Pare (born 1948), English photographer * Paré, a surname (includes a list) Places * Goregaon or formerly Pare, now a suburb of Mumbai, India * Parè, a municipality in the Province of Como, Italy * Pare, Kediri, a town in East Java, Indonesia * Pare Mountains, a mountain range in northeastern Tanzania Other uses * PARE (aviation), a spin recovery technique in aviation * Pare (fort), a type of ruins on Rapa Iti * Pare language, a Bantu language closely related to Taveta * Pare (music), a concept in the European folk music traditions of Albania * Pare people, members of an ethnic group indigenous to the Pare Mountains of northern Tanzania * "Pare" (song), by Camp Mulla * Pare, a lintel above the door of a Māori wharenui * Pare, a colloquial name for Auckland Prison See also * Pa ...
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Pare-Pare
Parepare is a city (''kota'') in South Sulawesi, Indonesia, located on the southwest coast of Sulawesi, about north of the provincial capital of Makassar. A port town, it is one of the major population centers of the Bugis people. The city had a population of 129,542 people at the 2010 Census and 151,454 at the 2020 Census. Jusuf Habibie, the third President of Indonesia, was born in Parepare. History In the early development of this plateau, there was just a thicket of bushes which had many holes on slightly sloping land, which grew wild irregularly, ranging from the northern (Cappa Edge) up to the route south from the city. As the time goes by, those bushes have now become the city of Parepare. At an early date, there were kingdoms located on Parepare - the kingdom of Suppa in the 14th century and Bacukiki Kingdom in the 15th century. The term "Parepare" originates from the sentence of the King of Gowa “Bajiki Ni Pare” which means “(Ports in this region) are good.” Sin ...
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Pare Lorentz
Pare Lorentz (December 11, 1905 – March 4, 1992) was an American filmmaker known for his film work about the New Deal. Born Leonard MacTaggart Lorentz in Clarksburg, West Virginia he was educated at Buckhannon High School, West Virginia Wesleyan College, and West Virginia University. As a young film critic in both New York City and Hollywood, Lorentz spoke out against censorship in the film industry. As the most influential documentary filmmaker of the Great Depression, Lorentz was the leading American advocate for government-sponsored documentary films. His service as a filmmaker for the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II was formidable, including technical films, documentation of bombing raids, and synthesizing raw footage of Nazi atrocities for an educational film on the Nuremberg Trials. Nonetheless, Lorentz perennially will be known best as " FDR′s filmmaker." New Deal documentary films Lorentz left West Virginia University, in 1925, to begin a career as a write ...
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Pare People
The Pare (pronounced "Pahray") people are members of an ethnic group indigenous to the Pare Mountains of northern Tanzania, part of the Kilimanjaro Region. Historically, Pareland was also known as ''Vuasu'' (South Pare) and ''Vughweno'' (North Pare) to its inhabitants. The location lies on one of the northern routes of the historic East-African long-distance trade, connecting the hinterland with the coast of the Indian Ocean. The people of ''Vuasu'' (''Asu'' being the root word) are referred to as ''Vaasu'' and they speak a language known as '' Chasu'' or ''Athu''. The people of ''Vughweno'' (''Ugweno'', in Swahili) are referred to as ''Vaghweno'' (''Wagweno'' in Swahili) and they speak a language known as '' Kighweno'' ('' Gweno'' in Swahili). Although once constituting a single, greater ''Vughweno'' area; current residents of northern Pare recognise two sub-areas based on ethnolinguistic differences: '' Gweno''-speaking Ugweno to the north and ''Chasu''-speaking Usangi to ...
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Richard Pare
Richard Pare (born 20 January 1948 in Portsmouth, England) is an English photographer known for his work documenting Soviet modernist architecture. He was born in Portsmouth, England, on 20 January 1948. He studied graphic design and photography at Winchester and Ravensbourne College of Art before attending the Art Institute of Chicago. He received a Master of Fine Arts from Chicago in 1973. He was the founding curator of the Photography Collection of the Canadian Centre for Architecture. Richard Pare curated the exhibitionPhotography and Architecture: 1839–1939 at the Canadian Centre for Architecture in 1982. Exhibitions of his photographs includeLost Vanguard: Soviet Modernist Architecture, 1922–32 (2007) andLe Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern Landscapes at the Museum of Modern Art (2013). Selected publications * Richard Pare (1982). ''Photography and Architecture, 1839–1939''. Montréal: Canadian Centre for Architecture; ew York Callaway Editions. * Richard Pare (1996). '' ...
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Pare Mountains
The Pare Mountains are a mountain range in northeastern Tanzania, located north of the Usambara Mountains. The mountains are administratively located in the Kilimanjaro Region, specifically in the Mwanga District and Same District. The North and South Pare mountain ranges reach a height of 2,463 meters at Shengena Peak. They are separated into North Pare Mountains and South Pare Mountains and are part of the Eastern Arc of mountains. The mountains are named after the indigenous Pare people who reside there. Bird species in the Pare mountains include the endemic South Pare white-eye (''Zosterops winifredae''), the mountain buzzard (''Buteo oreophilus''), olive woodpecker The olive woodpecker (''Dendropicos griseocephalus'') is a species of bird in the woodpecker family Picidae. Taxonomy The olive woodpecker was described by the French polymath Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon in 1780 in his ''Histoire Natu ... (''Mesopicos griseocephalus''), moustached tinkerbird ...
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Auckland Prison
Auckland Prison (original name Paremoremo Prison, colloquially Pare, pronounced "Par-re") is a prison facility consisting of medium security and maximum security compounds in Paremoremo, Auckland, New Zealand. The two compounds are separate but located close together in a rural area. The prison contains New Zealand's only specialist maximum-security unit, housing some of the most severe criminals in the country. Its old names of 'Paremoremo' and 'Pare' are still well-known and used throughout New Zealand. Organisation Facilities Auckland Prison has beds for 680 prisoners. It includes the medium-security Auckland West division, built in 1981 to relieve crowding at other institutions, particularly at Mount Eden Prison; a minimum security work and pre-release unit called ''Te Mahinga''; and a 60-bed special treatment unit for child sex offenders, called ''Te Piriti''. Within the maximum security prison, the section formerly called 'D Block' has a harsh reputation. Conditions ...
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Rapa Iti
Rapa, also called Rapa Iti, or "Little Rapa", to distinguish it from Easter Island, whose Polynesian name is Rapa Nui, is the largest and only inhabited island of the Bass Islands in French Polynesia. An older name for the island is Oparo. The total land area including offshore islets is . As of the 2017 census, Rapa had a population of 507.Répartition de la population en Polynésie française en 2017
Institut de la statistique de la Polynésie française
The island's highest point is at elevation at Mont Perahu. Its main town is Ahuréi. The inhabitants of Rapa Iti speak their own Polynesian language called the
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Wharenui
A wharenui (; literally "large house") is a communal house of the Māori people of New Zealand, generally situated as the focal point of a ''marae''. Wharenui are usually called meeting houses in New Zealand English, or simply called ''whare'' (a more generic term simply referring to a house or building). Also called a ''whare rūnanga'' ("meeting house") or ''whare whakairo'' (literally "carved house"), the present style of wharenui originated in the early to middle nineteenth century. The houses are often carved inside and out with stylized images of the iwi's (or tribe's) ancestors, with the style used for the carvings varying from tribe to tribe. Modern meeting houses are built to regular building standards. Photographs of recent ancestors may be used as well as carvings. The houses always have names, sometimes the name of a famous ancestor or sometimes a figure from Māori mythology. Some meeting houses are built at places that are not the location of a tribe, but where many ...
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List Of European Folk Music Traditions
This is a list of folk music traditions, with styles, dances, instruments and other related topics. The term ''folk music'' can not be easily defined in a precise manner; it is used with widely varying definitions depending on the author, intended audience and context within a work. Similarly, the term ''traditions'' in this context does not connote any strictly-defined criteria. Music scholars, journalists, audiences, record industry individuals, politicians, nationalists and demagogues may often have occasion to address which fields of folk music are to a distinct group of people and with characteristics undiluted by contact with the music of other peoples; thus, the folk music traditions described herein overlap in varying degrees with each other. Sometimes, folk songs will often be passed down. Europe {{Folk country row , Tradition = Bosnian  , Styles = {{hlist, gange, gusle, ilahije, izvorna bosanska muzika, Ladino song, novokomponovana ...
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Pare Language
Pare (''Kipare''), also known as Asu (''Casu, Chasu, Athu, Chathu''), is a Northeast Coast Bantu language spoken by the Pare people of Tanzania Tanzania (; ), officially the United Republic of Tanzania ( sw, Jamhuri ya Muungano wa Tanzania), is a country in East Africa within the African Great Lakes region. It borders Uganda to the north; Kenya to the northeast; Comoro Islands .... References Northeast Coast Bantu languages {{Bantu-lang-stub ...
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Pare (music)
Pare may refer to: People with the name * Emmett Paré (1907-1973), tennis player * Pare, former member of Kotak, an Indonesian band * Pare Lorentz (1905-1992), American film director * Richard Pare (born 1948), English photographer * Paré, a surname (includes a list) Places * Goregaon or formerly Pare, now a suburb of Mumbai, India * Parè, a municipality in the Province of Como, Italy * Pare, Kediri, a town in East Java, Indonesia * Pare Mountains, a mountain range in northeastern Tanzania Other uses * PARE (aviation), a spin recovery technique in aviation * Pare (fort), a type of ruins on Rapa Iti * Pare language, a Bantu language closely related to Taveta * Pare (music), a concept in the European folk music traditions of Albania * Pare people, members of an ethnic group indigenous to the Pare Mountains of northern Tanzania * "Pare" (song), by Camp Mulla * Pare, a lintel above the door of a Māori wharenui * Pare, a colloquial name for Auckland Prison See also * ...
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