John Yudkin

John Yudkin
Born(1910-08-08)8 August 1910
London, England
Died12 July 1995(1995-07-12) (aged 84)
London, England
EducationBSc (London) 1929[citation needed]
BA (Cambridge) 1931
PhD (Cambridge) 1935
MB, BChir (Cambridge) 1938[citation needed]
MD (Cambridge) 1943[citation needed]
Alma materChrist's College, Cambridge
Occupation(s)Professor of Physiology, Queen Elizabeth College, London, 1945–1954.
Professor of Nutrition, Queen Elizabeth College, 1954–1971.[1]
Notable workPure, White and Deadly

John Yudkin FRSC (8 August 1910 – 12 July 1995) was a British physiologist and nutritionist, and the founding Professor of the Department of Nutrition at Queen Elizabeth College, London.

Yudkin wrote several books recommending low-carbohydrate diets for weight loss, including This Slimming Business (1958). He gained an international reputation for his book Pure, White and Deadly (1972), which warned that the consumption of sugar (sucrose, which consists of fructose and glucose) is dangerous to health, an argument he had made since at least 1957.[2][3] Specifically, he wrote that sugar consumption was a factor in the development of conditions such as dental caries, obesity, diabetes, and heart attack.[4]

Yudkin's failure to incorporate possible confounding factors in his case-control designs was an area of heavy criticism at the time; apart from other unmeasured known risk factors that might affect cardiovascular disease (CVD), data had emerged soon after, suggesting that sugar intake was associated with smoking, a big risk factor for CVD.[5] Yudkin's failure to account for confounding factors led to harsh words from Ancel Keys at the time.[6]

From the late 2000s, there was a resurgence of interest in his work, following a 2009 YouTube video[7] about sugar and high-fructose corn syrup by the pediatric endocrinologist Robert Lustig, and because of increasing concern about an obesity epidemic and metabolic syndrome.[8][9][10] Pure, White and Deadly was republished in 2012, with a foreword by Lustig.[11]

Early life and education

Yudkin was raised in the East End of London in an Orthodox Jewish family that had fled the Russian pogroms of 1905. His father's death left six-year-old Yudkin and his four brothers to be raised by their mother in considerable poverty. He won scholarships to Hackney Downs School (formerly the Grocers' Company's School), and another from there to Chelsea Polytechnic.[1] After gaining his BSc degree in 1929 he briefly considered a career in teaching,[citation needed] but then discovered that he could sit an examination for a scholarship to the University of Cambridge. He matriculated at Christ's College, Cambridge as a scholar, and graduated in biochemistry at the age of 20 in 1931.

He worked for his PhD in the Department of Biochemistry at Cambridge under the supervision of Marjory Stephenson, a pioneer of research in bacterial metabolism, who funded his work.[1] His PhD thesis was on "adaptive enzymes" (subsequently termed "induced enzyme synthesis"). His account of the phenomenon inspired the research of Jacques Monod, who later worked out a detailed mechanism for the induction of enzymes in bacteria and was awarded the Nobel Prize for his work.[12]

In 1933 Yudkin married Milly Himmelweit, who had recently left Berlin to escape the worsening political situation. The marriage lasted until her death in March 1995. They had three sons, Michael (born 1938), Jonathan (1944–2012) and Jeremy (born 1948).

While pursuing his PhD research, Yudkin took up medical studies in 1934 and started teaching physiology and biochemistry to medical students,[1] first at Christ's College, then also at other colleges in Cambridge. He began clinical studies at The London Hospital in 1935, while continuing to teach in Cambridge one weekday and at weekends.

Career

Fellowships
  • FRSC (1938)
  • MRCP (1946)
  • FIBiol (1958)
  • FRCP (1975)
  • Fellow of King's College, London (1971)
  • Honorary Fellow of the Hebrew University, Jerusalem (1993)

Yudkin completed his medical studies in 1938, and was appointed Director of Medical Studies at Christ's College. The same year, he started research at the Dunn Nutritional Laboratory in Cambridge, working principally on the effects of dietary vitamins.

His studies of the nutritional status of school children in Cambridge showed that supplementation of the diet with vitamins had little effect on their general health.[13] The studies also showed serendipitously that children from a poorer area of Cambridge were shorter and lighter, and had lower haemoglobin levels and a weaker grip, than those from a wealthier area. Moreover, children from three industrial towns in Scotland were, on average, inferior in the same four measurements to the average Cambridge child, and the children from the poorer families in the Scottish towns were inferior in these measurements to those from the wealthier families.[14]

These findings probably helped to persuade Yudkin that nutrition was not only a biological science but also had important social and economic components and implications. In 1942 he wrote an article in The Times (published anonymously, as was customary in those days) pointing out that there were a large number of organisations in the UK concerned in some way with nutrition – the Ministry of Food, the Ministry of Health, the Medical Research Council, the Cabinet Advisory Board on Food Policy, etc. – but no single body responsible for formulating a uniform plan for nutrition. What was needed was a UK Nutrition Council with oversight of food policy.[15] The suggestion fell on deaf ears.

During the Second World War, Yudkin served in the Royal Army Medical Corps and was posted to Sierra Leone. While there he studied a skin disease that was prevalent among local African soldiers and discovered that it was due not to an infection, as had been believed, but to riboflavin deficiency.[16] He found that the Army had devised a uniform diet for its soldiers in the four British West African colonies (Gambia, Sierra Leone, Gold Coast and Nigeria). This diet was, on paper, adequate in all nutrients – including riboflavin, which was supplied predominantly from millet. But it turned out that millet, although a staple in the Gold Coast and Nigeria, was loathed by soldiers from Sierra Leone, who would not eat it even if they were hungry.[17] This experience must have brought home to Yudkin the importance of custom and upbringing in determining a person's choice of foods.

In 1945, shortly after the end of the war, he was elected to the Chair of Physiology at Queen Elizabeth College in London (then the King's College of Household and Social Science). Over the next several years, under his leadership, the college and the University of London established a BSc degree in nutrition[1] (the first degree in nutrition in any European university).[citation needed] Students were taught an integrated series of courses including not only chemistry, physics and biology but also relevant elements of demography, sociology, economics and psychology. The first students were admitted in 1953, and in 1954 the Department of Nutrition was officially opened and Yudkin's Chair was converted into a Professorship of Nutrition. During the following years the department won an international reputation not only for the strength of its research in the physiological and biochemical aspects of the subject, but also for work in such topics as nutrition in the elderly, food surveys in defined populations and the psychology of food choice, and it attracted numerous students from outside the UK, many of them from developing countries.

Yudkin's publications from the department showed an unusual breadth of interests, including (in addition to biochemistry) further studies of adaptive enzymes,[18][19] nutrition and public health,[20] diseases of affluence,[21][22] food choice both in human beings[23][24] and in experimental animals,[25] and historical aspects of the human diet.[26][27] But his concern became increasingly focused on two topics: the treatment of overweight and the harmful effects of excessive sugar (sucrose) consumption.

The end of food rationing early in the 1950s brought with it an increase in the number of people who were suffering from obesity, and by 1958 slimming diets had proliferated, many of them with no scientific basis. Yudkin showed that in most patients weight could be well controlled by restricting dietary carbohydrate.[28] This Slimming Business (1958), which expressed this idea in user-friendly language, proved popular: it was republished in paperback in 1962, reached its fourth edition in 1974, reappeared as Lose Weight, Feel Great in the US, was translated into Dutch and Hungarian, and spawned The Slimmer's Cook Book in 1961 and The Complete Slimmer in 1964.

Yudkin's interest in sugar arose indirectly from his studies of the alarming increase in many countries during the first half of the twentieth century in the incidence of coronary thrombosis. This increase was of great concern to health professionals, and it was widely attributed to an increase in the amount of fat, or of a particular type of fat, in the diet. In a paper published in 1957[2] Yudkin analysed diets and coronary mortality in different countries for the year 1952, and also analysed trends in diet, and trends in coronary mortality, in the UK between 1928 and 1954. The first of these analyses produced no evidence for the view that total fat, or animal fat, or hydrogenated fat, was the direct cause of coronary thrombosis; in fact the closest relationship between coronary deaths and any single dietary factor was with sugar. The second analysis, that of historical trends in the UK, found no good relationship with any single dietary factor. Instead, it suggested that some change or changes in lifestyle during the past several decades was contributing to the increased incidence of coronary deaths. One obvious change was reduced exercise, and another was alterations in diet.

Given the dramatic increase in sugar consumption during the first half of the century, Yudkin started to suspect that excessive sugar in the diet might contribute not only to obesity but also to coronary heart disease. Studying historical data from many different countries, he found that increasing prosperity leads to an increase in sugar consumption, particularly in manufactured foods, and also that the ready availability of sugar-containing manufactured foods even in the poorer countries may lead to their being bought in preference to more nutritious food.[4] In 1964 he wrote 'In the wealthier countries, there is evidence that sugar and sugar-containing foods contribute to several diseases, including obesity, dental caries, diabetes mellitus and myocardial infarction [heart attack]'.[4] Investigating whether any link between sugar consumption and disease could be shown in individual patients, he and his associates in the Department of Nutrition found that patients with atherosclerotic disease (a frequent precursor of coronary heart disease) consumed significantly more sucrose than control patients.[29]

An obstacle to the acceptance of these ideas was the belief at the time that sugar and starch were metabolised in the same way, so that one would expect no difference in their effects. Yudkin and his associates, however, fed both experimental animals and human volunteers with differing quantities of sugar and starch, and found major differences between the two carbohydrates in their metabolic effects.[30][31] Unlike his colleague Thomas L. Cleave, Yudkin believed sugar was more harmful than refined grains and refused to use the term "refined carbohydrates" because it gave "the impression that white flour has the same ill effects as sugar".[32] As early as 1967 Yudkin suggested that the excessive consumption of sugar might result in a disturbance in the secretion of insulin, and that this in turn might contribute to atherosclerosis and diabetes.[33]

Pure, White and Deadly

Background

Yudkin's Pure, White, and Deadly (1972) was written for a lay readership. Its intention was to summarise the evidence that the consumption of sugar was leading to a greatly increased incidence of coronary thrombosis; that it was certainly involved in dental caries, probably involved in obesity, diabetes and liver disease, and possibly involved in gout, dyspepsia and some cancers. The book drew on studies from Yudkin's own department and other biochemical and epidemiological research in the UK and elsewhere. Pure, White and Deadly was extremely successful. It appeared as Sweet and Dangerous in the US, and was translated into Finnish, German, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese and Swedish. A revised and expanded edition was published in 1986.

The last paragraph of Chapter 1 begins "I hope that when you have read this book I shall have convinced you that sugar is really dangerous." The message was extremely unwelcome to the sugar industry and manufacturers of processed foods. These firms employed a number of methods to impede Yudkin's work. The final chapter of Pure, White and Deadly lists several examples of attempts to interfere with the funding of his research and to prevent its publication. It also refers to the rancorous language and personal smears that Ancel Keys — the American epidemiologist who had proposed that saturated fat was the primary cause of heart disease — employed to dismiss the evidence that sugar was the true culprit. Keys wrote, for example:

It is clear that Yudkin has no theoretical basis or experimental evidence to support his claim for a major influence of dietary sucrose in the etiology of CHD; his claim that men who have CHD are excessive sugar eaters is nowhere confirmed but is disproved by many studies superior in methodology and/or magnitude to his own; and his "evidence" from population statistics and time trends will not bear up under the most elementary critical examination. But the propaganda keeps on reverberating ...[34][35]

The efforts of the food industry to discredit the case against sugar were largely successful, and by the time of Yudkin's death in 1995 his warnings were, for the most part, no longer being taken seriously.[11] Despite the criticism that he had "no theoretical basis" to support his claims,[34] following a successful publication of his book in America, the McGovern Guidelines for US dietary goals recommended, in 1977, a reduction in sugar intake "by 40 percent,"[36] and the US-published guidelines in 1980 prominently advised "don't eat too much sugar."[37]

Republication

In 2009 Robert Lustig, a pediatric endocrinologist of the University of California, San Francisco, with a special interest in childhood obesity, made a video, Sugar: The Bitter Truth.[8] Lustig and his colleagues had discovered, independently of Yudkin's work, that sugar has serious deleterious effects, particularly in the etiology of diabetes and obesity. In his video, Lustig referred to his re-discovery of and admiration for Yudkin's research. The popularity of the video, which has been viewed 24 million times (as of May, 2024), has contributed to a resurgence of interest in Yudkin's research.[11]

Pure, White and Deadly was republished in 2012, 40 years after its first appearance, with an introduction by Lustig, and subsequently translated into German and Korean. Articles on Yudkin's work, and the way in which the food industry denigrated and obstructed his research, have appeared in the lay press[9][38][39] and in television programmes in the UK, Australia and Canada. His arguments and evidence for the dangers of sugar were the focus of several articles in the British Medical Journal on 19 January 2013.[10]

Later life

Yudkin retired from his Professorship in 1971 and left the college in 1974. He continued to write research papers and books. This Nutrition Business appeared in 1976 (and was later translated into Spanish), A–Z of Slimming in 1977, Eat Well, Slim Well in 1982, The Penguin Encyclopedia of Nutrition in 1985 (later translated into French), and The Sensible Person's Guide to Weight Control in 1990. He also continued to write popular articles in lay magazines, having by now become a household name. Having been interested in Israel for many years – soon after its foundation in 1948 he had been asked to advise on the nutritional problems experienced by the new state – he continued in his retirement as an active Governor of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He also began to collect antiquarian books, specialising in medicine, nutrition and the culinary arts; after his death much of his collection was given to the National Library of Israel, Jerusalem. He died in London on 12 July 1995.[40]

Selected works

Books by John Yudkin alone

  • Yudkin, John (1958). This Slimming Business. London: MacGibbon and Kee. OCLC 1438051.
  • — (1964). The Complete Slimmer. London: MacGibbon and Kee. OCLC 6577528.
  • — (1972). Pure, White and Deadly: The Problem of Sugar. London: Davis-Poynter. ISBN 978-0706700565. OCLC 571307.
  • — (1976). This Nutrition Business. Sevenoaks: Teach Yourself Books. ISBN 978-0312800550. OCLC 3168592.
  • — (1977). A–Z of slimming. London: Davis-Poynter. ISBN 978-0706702132. OCLC 3868327.
  • — (1982). Eat Well, Slim Well. London: Collins and Davis-Poynter. ISBN 978-0002163965. OCLC 16552964.
  • — (1985). The Penguin Encyclopaedia of Nutrition. Harmondsworth: Viking. ISBN 978-0670801114. OCLC 12096288.
  • — (1990). The Sensible Person's Guide to Weight Control. London: Smith-Gordon. ISBN 978-1854630438. OCLC 59832913.

Books written or edited by Yudkin and others

  • Yudkin, John; Chappell, G. M. (1961). The Slimmer's Cookbook. London: MacGibbon and Kee.
  • —; McKenzie, J. C., eds. (1964). Changing Food Habits. London: MacGibbon and Kee.
  • —, ed. (1966). Our Changing Fare: Two Hundred Years of British Food Habits. London: MacGibbon and Kee.
  • —; Barker, T. C.; Oddy, D. J. (1970). The Dietary Surveys of Dr Edward Smith 1862–3. London: Queen Elizabeth College.
  • —; Edelman, J.; Hough, L., eds. (1971). Sugar. London: Butterworths.
  • —; Barker, T. C., eds. (1971). Fish in Britain. London: Queen Elizabeth College.
  • —; Burland, W. L.; Samuel, P. D., eds. (1974). Obesity Symposium. Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone.
  • —, ed. (1978). Diet of Man: Needs and Wants. London: Applied Science Publishers.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Davies, Louise (24 July 1995). "Obituary: John Yudkin", The Independent.
  2. ^ a b Yudkin, John (27 July 1957). "Diet and Coronary Thrombosis". The Lancet. 270 (6987): 155–162. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(57)90614-1. PMID 13450357.
  3. ^ For sucrose, "Sucrose", PubChem, National Center for Biotechnology Information.
  4. ^ a b c Yudkin, John (1964). "Patterns and Trends in Carbohydrate Consumption and their Relation to Disease". Proceedings of the Nutrition Society. 23 (2): 149–162. doi:10.1079/pns19640028. PMID 14189103.
  5. ^ [1] "sugar consumption and cigarette smoking"
  6. ^ Keys, A. (1971). "Sucrose in the diet and coronary heart disease". Atherosclerosis. 14 (2): 193–202. doi:10.1016/0021-9150(71)90049-9. PMID 4940760.
  7. ^ Sugar: The Bitter Truth on YouTube
  8. ^ a b Lustig, Robert H. (July 2009). Sugar: The Bitter Truth on YouTube. University of California Television.
  9. ^ a b Taubes, Gary (13 April 2011). Is Sugar Toxic?, The New York Times.
  10. ^ a b Watts, Geoff (15 January 2013). "Sugar and the heart: old ideas revisited". BMJ. 346: e7800. doi:10.1136/bmj.e7800. PMID 23321487. S2CID 26350998.
  11. ^ a b c Leslie, Ian (7 April 2016). "The sugar conspiracy". The Guardian.
  12. ^ Monod, Jacques (11 December 1965). "Nobel Lecture: From Enzymatic Adaption to Allosteric Transitions" (PDF). Nobel Media AB. p. 1.
  13. ^ Yudkin, John (1944). "Nutritional Status of Cambridge School-Children". British Medical Journal. ii (4362): 201–214. doi:10.1136/bmj.2.4362.201. PMC 2286012. PMID 20785586.
  14. ^ Yudkin, John (16 September 1944). "The Nutritional Status of Children and Mothers of Industrial Towns". The Medical Officer.
  15. ^ Anonymous (28 August 1942). "Food and Food Values". The Times.
  16. ^ Yudkin, John (October–November 1946). "Riboflavin Deficiency in the West African Soldier". Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. 49 (5): 83–87. PMID 20281466.
  17. ^ Yudkin, John (1946). "Some Observations on Nutrition in the West African Soldier". Nutrition, Dietetics, Catering (Spring and Summer): 1–4.
  18. ^ Mandelstam, Joel; J. Yudkin (1952). "Studies in Biochemical Adaptation. The Effect of Variation in Dietary Protein upon the Hepatic Arginase of the Rat". Biochemical Journal. 51 (5): 681–686. doi:10.1042/bj0510681. PMC 1197916. PMID 13018145.
  19. ^ Mandelstam, Joel; J. Yudkin (1951). "Studies in Biochemical Adaptation. Some Aspects of Galactozymase Production in Yeast in Relation to the 'Mass Action' Theory of Enzyme Adaptation". Biochemical Journal. 51 (5): 686–693. doi:10.1042/bj0510686. PMC 1197917. PMID 13018146.
  20. ^ Yudkin, John (November 1964). "Nutrition Education: For Whom and By Whom?". Home Economics: 16–19.
  21. ^ Yudkin, John (1961–1962). "Nutrition in the Affluent Society". Memoirs and Proceedings of the Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society. 104: 579–86. PMID 14079869.
  22. ^ Yudkin, John (1965). "Evolution, History and Nutrition: Their Bearing on Oral Disease and Other Diseases of Civilisation". Dental Practitioner. 16 (2): 60–64. PMID 5214376.
  23. ^ Yudkin, John (12 May 1956). "Man's Choice of Food". The Lancet. 267 (6924): 645–649. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(56)90687-0. PMID 13320834.
  24. ^ Yudkin, John (22 June 1963). "Nutrition and Palatability with Special Reference to Obesity, Myocardial Infarction, and Other Diseases of Civilisation". The Lancet. 281 (7295): 1335–1338. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(63)91920-2. PMID 14002890.
  25. ^ Khairy, Melek; T.B. Morgan and J. Yudkin; Yudkin, John (1963). "Choice of Diets of Differing Caloric Density by Normal and Hyperphagic Rats". British Journal of Nutrition. 17: 557–568. doi:10.1079/bjn19630058. PMID 14083954.
  26. ^ T.C. Barker, J.C. McKenzie and John Yudkin (1966). Our Changing Fare. London: MacGibbon and Kee. pp. 150–159.
  27. ^ Oddy, D.J.; J. Yudkin (1968). "An Evaluation of English Diets of the 1860s". Proceedings of the Nutrition Society. 28: 13A.
  28. ^ Yudkin, John (19 December 1959). "The Causes and Cure of Obesity". The Lancet. 274 (7112): 1135–1138. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(59)90116-3. PMID 13846696.
  29. ^ Yudkin, John; Janet Roddy (4 July 1964). "Levels of Dietary Sucrose in Patients with Occlusive Atherosclerotic Disease". The Lancet. 284 (7349): 6–8. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(64)90003-0. PMID 14149219.
  30. ^ Al-Nagdy, Sohair; D.S. Miller, R.U. Qureshi and John Yudkin; Qureshi, R. U.; Yudkin, John (1966). "Metabolic Differences Between Starch and Sugar". Nature. 209 (5018): 81–82. Bibcode:1966Natur.209...81A. doi:10.1038/209081a0. PMID 5927230. S2CID 4187732.
  31. ^ Akinyanju, P.A.; R.U. Qureshi, A.J. Salter and John Yudkin; Salter, A. J.; Yudkin, John (1968). "Effect of an "Atherogenic" Diet Containing Starch or Sucrose on the Blood Lipids of Young Men". Nature. 218 (5145): 975–977. Bibcode:1968Natur.218..975A. doi:10.1038/218975a0. PMID 5681247. S2CID 4215023.
  32. ^ Scrinis, Gyorgy (2013). Nutritionism: The Science and Politics of Dietary Advice. Columbia University Press. p. 84.
  33. ^ Yudkin, John (1967). Chemistry, Medicine and Nutrition: Symposium held in Bristol on 14–15 April, 1966. London: Royal Institute of Chemistry. pp. 33–44.
  34. ^ a b Keys, Ancel (1971). "Sucrose in the Diet and Coronary Heart Disease". Atherosclerosis. 14 (2): 193–202. doi:10.1016/0021-9150(71)90049-9. PMID 4940760.
  35. ^ Keys, Ancel (1975). "Coronary Heart Disease - The Global Picture". Atherosclerosis. 22 (2): 149–192. doi:10.1016/0021-9150(75)90001-5. PMID 1103902.
  36. ^ US Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs (February 1977). "Dietary Goals for the United States" (PDF).
  37. ^ "Nutrition and Your Health" (PDF). Home and Garden Bulletin. US Department of Agriculture. February 1980. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 February 2021. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
  38. ^ Rumbelow, Helen (9 January 2014). "Sugar: The Bitter Truth". The Times.
  39. ^ Llewellyn Smith, Julia (17 February 2014). "John Yudkin: The Man Who Tried to Warn Us About sugar". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 18 February 2014.
  40. ^ "Obituary: John Yudkin". Independent.co.uk. 24 July 1995.

Read other articles:

Railway station in Hakone, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Hakone-Yumoto Station – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (April 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Hakone-Yumoto Station箱根湯本駅The station in January 2018General in...

 

  Pesi mediAmsterdam 1928 Informazioni generaliLuogoKrachtsportgebouw, Amsterdam Periodo28 e 29 luglio 1928 Partecipanti23 da 15 nazioni Podio Roger François  Francia Carlo Galimberti  Italia Guus Scheffer  Paesi Bassi Edizione precedente e successiva Parigi 1924 Los Angeles 1932 Voce principale: Sollevamento pesi ai Giochi della IX Olimpiade. Sollevamento pesi adAmsterdam 1928 Pesi piuma Pesi leggeri Pesi medi Pesi massimi-leggeri Pesi massimi La competizione della c...

 

M107/M110 M107 175mm-kanon Soort Periode - Bemanning 13 man Lengte 5,7 m (alleen romp) M107: 11,3 m M110: 7,5m Breedte 3,2 m Hoogte 2,9 m Gewicht M107: 28,4 ton M110: 26,5 ton Pantser en bewapening Pantser geen Hoofdbewapening M107: 175mm-kanon M110: 203mm-houwitser Motor Detroit Diesel, 8-cilinder-dieselmotor vermogen 405 pk Snelheid (op wegen) circa 55 km/u Rijbereik 724 km (op weg) M107/M110 houwitser in het Site Gunfire Brasschaat-museum De M107/M110 is een aanduiding van twee typen kanon...

Tönnhausen Stadt Winsen (Luhe) Koordinaten: 53° 23′ N, 10° 16′ O53.37608310.2597225Koordinaten: 53° 22′ 34″ N, 10° 15′ 35″ O Höhe: 5 m ü. NHN Einwohner: 731 (31. Dez. 2017)[1] Eingemeindung: 1. Juli 1972 Postleitzahl: 21423 Vorwahl: 04179 Tönnhausen ist ein Ortsteil von Winsen (Luhe) im Landkreis Harburg in Niedersachsen. Der Ort hatte am 31. Dezember 2017 insgesamt 731 Einwohner. Ortsv...

 

Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forest Lage Georgia, Vereinigte Staaten Fläche 3504 km² Geographische Lage 34° 46′ N, 84° 7′ W34.763615-84.115448Koordinaten: 34° 45′ 49″ N, 84° 6′ 56″ W Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forest (USA) Einrichtungsdatum 9. Juli 1936 Verwaltung US Forest Service f6f2 Herbst im Chattahoochee National Forest Der Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forest in Nordgeorgia umfasst zwei Nationalforste, de...

 

Samoa Americana en los Juegos Olímpicos Bandera de Samoa AmericanaCódigo COI ASACON Comité Olímpico Nacional de Samoa AmericanaJuegos Olímpicos de Sídney 2000Deportistas 4 en 3 deportesAbanderado Lisa MisipekaMedallas 0 0 0 0 Historia olímpicaJuegos de verano 1988 • 1992 • 1996 • 2000 • 2004 • 2008 • 2012 • 2016 • 2020 •Juegos de invierno 1994 • 1998 • 2002 ...

هذه المقالة بحاجة لصندوق معلومات. فضلًا ساعد في تحسين هذه المقالة بإضافة صندوق معلومات مخصص إليها. هذه المقالة يتيمة إذ تصل إليها مقالات أخرى قليلة جدًا. فضلًا، ساعد بإضافة وصلة إليها في مقالات متعلقة بها. (نوفمبر 2015) الفناء الداخلي للكلية المبنى رقم 1 واجهة الكلية واجهة الك...

 

Shamus KhanKhan speaks at Politics & Prose in Washington, D.C., in January 2020BornShamus Rahman Khan (1978-10-08) October 8, 1978 (age 45)New York City, United StatesNationalityAmericanOccupation(s)Sociologist, professor Shamus Rahman Khan (born October 8, 1978) is an American sociologist. He is a professor of sociology and American Studies at Princeton University. Formerly he served as chair of the sociology department at Columbia University. He writes on elites, inequality, gender...

 

Ship of the Baltic fleet, 1703–27 Shtandart Modern Replica (1999) under sail in Baltic Sea, 2007 History Russian Empire NameShtandart NamesakeImperial Yacht ship, frigate (Modern Replica, 1999) OwnerImperial Russian Navy Ordered1703 BuilderShipyard of Olonets city Laid downApril 24, 1703 LaunchedAugust 22, 1703 AcquiredSeptember 8, 1703 CommissionedSeptember 8, 1703, 1999 Decommissioned1727 In service1710 Out of service1711 FateBroken up General characteristics (typical) Class and type24-gu...

Political party in Lebanon Lana لَــناFounded2022IdeologyReformismSocial democracyPolitical positionCentre-leftParliament of Lebanon1 / 128 Websitehttps://lnalebanon.org/Politics of LebanonPolitical partiesElections Lana, officially Lana – Social Democratic Party (Arabic: لـنا – حزب ديمقراطي اجتماعي; lit. 'For us') is a reformist political party founded in Lebanon which was established on the basis of the 17 October Revolution.[1][...

 

ملعب اوليبميا هلسينغبورغمعلومات عامةالاستعمال كرة القدم العنوان Mellersta Stenbocksgatan 8, 254 37 Helsingborg (بالسويدية) المنطقة الإدارية بلدية هيلسينجبورج البلد  السويد موقع الويب helsingborg.se… (السويدية) الاستعمالالرياضة كرة القدم المستضيف Helsingborgs IF (en) المالك بلدية هيلسينجبورج أحداث مهمة...

 

Filmfare Awards Bangla for Best Playback Singer MaleThe current recipient: Arijit SinghAwarded forBest Performance by a Playback Singer MalePresented byFilmfareFirst awardedArijit Singh,Mon Majhi ReBoss (2014)Currently held byArijit Singh,Aajkey RaateyBismillah (2023)WebsiteFilmfare Awards BanglaThe Filmfare Bangla Best Male Playback Singer Award is given by Indian film magazine Filmfare as a part of its annual Filmfare Awards Bangla for Bengali films, to recognise a male playback singer who ...

Artikel ini sebatang kara, artinya tidak ada artikel lain yang memiliki pranala balik ke halaman ini.Bantulah menambah pranala ke artikel ini dari artikel yang berhubungan atau coba peralatan pencari pranala.Tag ini diberikan pada Desember 2022. Scirtothrips dorsalis TaksonomiKerajaanAnimaliaFilumArthropodaKelasInsectaOrdoThysanopteraFamiliThripidaeGenusScirtothripsSpesiesScirtothrips dorsalis J. Douglas Hood, 1919 lbs Scritothrips dorsalis adalah hama yang menyerang berbagai jenis tanaman sa...

 

Pour les articles homonymes, voir Couvent des Ursulines. Couvent des Ursulines de DinanPrésentationType CouventFondation 1620Ingénieur PoussinPatrimonialité Inscrit MH (1987)LocalisationAdresse 19, rue de la Boulangerie Dinan, Côtes-d'Armor FranceCoordonnées 48° 27′ 19″ N, 2° 02′ 50″ Omodifier - modifier le code - modifier Wikidata L’ancien couvent des Ursulines de Dinan se situe au nord de l'église Saint-Malo, au carrefour de la rue d...

 

American science fiction magazine (1950–1980) For the 19th-century periodical, see The Galaxy (magazine). David Stone's cover for the first issue of Galaxy Galaxy Science Fiction was an American digest-size science fiction magazine, published in Boston from 1950 to 1980.[1] It was founded by a French-Italian company, World Editions, which was looking to break into the American market. World Editions hired as editor H. L. Gold, who rapidly made Galaxy the leading science fiction maga...

Spanish sports journalist and TV panelist In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Estrada and the second or maternal family name is Calzada. Pipi EstradaEstrada in 2019BornJosé Manuel Estrada Calzada (1957-03-12) 12 March 1957 (age 66)Gijón, Asturias, SpainOccupation(s)Journalist, television personalityYears active1983–presentEmployer(s)AtresmediaCOPEMediaset España José Manuel Estrada Calzada (born 12 March 1957), better known as Pipi Estrada, is a well...

 

No debe confundirse con la conquista española del archipiélago, realizada en 1567. Campaña de Chiloé Parte de Guerra de independencia de Chile Mapa del archipiélago de Chiloé.Fecha 1820-1826Lugar Isla Grande de ChiloéResultado Victoria patriotaConsecuencias Firma del Tratado de Tantauco (18 de enero de 1826)Cambios territoriales Anexión del archipiélago de Chiloé al territorio chileno.Beligerantes Patriotas: Supremo gobierno de Chile[n 1]​ Realistas: Gobierno de Chiloé Comand...

 

Длина   L {\displaystyle \ L} Размерность L Единицы измерения СИ м СГС см ДлинаИзмерения: L — длина, B — ширина, H — высота, толщина, глубина Длина́ — физическая величина, числовая характеристика протяжённости линий. В большинстве систем измерений единица длины — одна из основ...

Danish tennis player For the Danish football (soccer) player and manager, see Kurt Nikkelaj Nielsen. For the Norwegian singer, see Kurt Nilsen. Kurt NielsenNielsen in 1999Country (sports) DenmarkBorn(1930-11-19)19 November 1930Copenhagen, DenmarkDied11 June 2011(2011-06-11) (aged 80)Turned pro1960 (amateur tour from 1948)Retired1966PlaysRight-handed (one-handed backhand)CoachDon Tregonning (1955)SinglesCareer record205–103Career titles13Highest rankingNo. ...

 

Woven or knitted widthways-ribbed textile For other uses, see Ottoman. A knitted Ottoman rib fabric Ottoman is a widthways-ribbed textile with pronounced, raised 'ribs' along its [[wale and course]. Similar to grosgrain, Ottoman is known as a corded fabric, using a thicker yarn in the course rather than the wale to create raised stripes running across the width of the fabric. Ottoman may be knitted or woven, and produces a stiff, heavyweight fabric; knitted Ottoman features a likewise widthwa...

 

Strategi Solo vs Squad di Free Fire: Cara Menang Mudah!