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Edward Elgar: Cello Concerto in E minor – Sheku Kanneh-Mason, City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla (HD 1080p)














Sheku Kanneh-Mason performs Elgar's Cello Concerto with the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra under the baton of the Lithuanian conductor Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla (b. 1986 in Vilnius). The concert was recorded at Royal Albert Hall, London, on August 22, 2019.



Edward Elgar's Concerto for cello and orchestra in E minor, from the year 1919, is the last major work the composer penned (a Third Symphony remained in draft form at his death in 1934). While the instrumental forces remain basically equivalent to those used in the Violin Concerto, Elgar has amplified the tender, searching intimacy of that earlier work to such a degree that one might call the Cello Concerto not just introspective but searing and almost ascetic. It is an exceedingly complex but immediately touching work that makes a fitting epilogue to Elgar's lifetime in music.

The Concerto is poured into a four-movement mold, yet still takes only about half an hour to perform – far less than any of Elgar's other large instrumental works. This restraint is mirrored by remarkably transparent orchestration. The work begins with four bars of solo cello recitative that firmly outline the home key of E minor. The subsequent Moderato entrance of the orchestra offers little immediate support for that key, really winding down to the tonic only after six bars of restless 9/8 melody built on a single rhythmic cell. During the 12/8 middle section Elgar makes good use of the contrast between E minor and E major. A recapitulation of the opening is made, but soon enough the movement has dissolved into a handful of uncertain pizzicati.

Elgar brings back the opening recitative, much altered (and buoyantly beginning where the first movement's pizzicati left off), to begin the following Scherzo. After twice pleading with the orchestra to join its cause, the cello finally rouses the group into an eighth note driven perpetual motion (Allegro molto). Elgar paints a miniature portrait of his own very characteristic lyric style in the relatively brief E flat major second theme.

A wonderful melody in B flat major is sung by the soloist throughout the Adagio third movement. Here Elgar's indebtedness to Schumann, the slow movement of whose own cello concerto also employs this song without words approach, is clearly evident. The life span of this one melodic strand is a bare 60 bars, yet it conveys deeper passion than do five times that many bars of the composer's earlier music. The movement ends on the dominant, paving the way for an attacca opening of the Finale.

After initially falling in with the B flat major of the Adagio, the Finale makes an eight-bar move back to its rightful E minor tonal center. The main idea of the movement (marked, like so many of the composer's favorite thoughts, "nobilmente") is given out first by the soloist in half-recitative and then, after a rude tutti interruption and a brief pause, by the entire ensemble, Allegro non troppo. A second theme recalls both the G major tonality and the impish sentiment of the Scherzo movement. As the Finale draws near its finish, Elgar undertakes an extended and very moving reminiscence: first on the melody of the Adagio movement and then reaching back to the recitative that began the entire half-hour journey. Two terse chords re-energize the movement's fast-twitch muscle fiber, and 16 bars later the curtain comes down.

Source: Blair Johnston (allmusic.com)



Edward Elgar (1857-1934)

♪ Cello Concerto in E minor, Op.85 (1919)


i. Adagio – Moderato [00:00]*

ii. Lento – Allegro molto [07:54]
iii.. Adagio [12:42]
iv. Allegro – Moderato – Allegro, ma non troppo – Poco più lento – Adagio [17:17]


Encore:

Mieczysław Weinberg (1919-1996)

♪ Prélude No.18, Sarabande (from Twenty-Four Preludes, Op.100) (1969) [30:54]


Sheku Kanneh-Mason, cello

City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla

Royal Albert Hall, London, August 22, 2019

(HD 1080p)

* Start time of each movement















British cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason (b. 1999) won the prestigious BBC Young Musician of the Year competition in 2016 when he was just 17 years old, performing Shostakovich's fiendish Cello Concerto No.1. The first black musician to win the competition in its 38-year history, Kanneh-Mason was born and raised in a suburb of Nottingham, England.

The third of seven siblings who all turned out to be exceptionally musically talented, he was inspired initially by his eldest sister Isata, who showed an early aptitude for the piano and was accepted at the age of eight into the Royal Academy of Music's junior department. Following in her footsteps, Sheku took up the cello at the age of six, and, aged nine, won a scholarship to also attend the Royal Academy.

He joined Chineke, Europe's first BAME (black and minority ethnic) classical orchestra, and, together with Isata and his violinist brother Braimah, formed the Kanneh-Mason Trio, appearing in 2015 on Britain's Got Talent. His experience on the show prepared him for Young Musician's relatively sedate televised segments.

After winning Young Musician, where his playing immediately drew comparisons with Jacqueline du Pré, he was signed by Decca. His 2018 debut album Inspiration featured the Shostakovich concerto along with other classical pieces and his own versions of songs by Bob Marley and Leonard Cohen. It became the first debut album by a Young Musician winner to chart, entering the U.K. pop rankings at number 18. That same spring, he and an orchestra performed for guests at the wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle while the couple signed the register.

Source: John D. Buchanan (allmusic.com)






























































More photos


See also


Edward Elgar: Cello Concerto in E minor – Truls Mørk, Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra, Edward Gardner (HD 1080p)

Ferncliff Beach

Ferncliff is located at the foot of Virginia Avenue, at the waterfront, the length of the property ending just east of Lincoln Avenue. According to documents at the Erie County Historical Society, Ferncliff dates back to 1893 and was incorporated as a development in 1903, giving people the right to build cottages on the water. One of the first cottage dwellers was, Charles Loesel, a tinsmith who built his own home out of tin nailed to an oak frame.

The Ferncliff lifestyle wasn't easily accessible in its early years because the only access was a steep wooden staircase off the bluff at the foot of Lincoln Avenue. Everything from building supplies to food had to be carried down the steps, water was derived from a spring that flowed without of the bank.

When the road was built in about the1930s, the stairs went unused, and in the 1960s, were abandoned. Many cottage owners raised their building on poles to prevent flooding during the high water, while others rebuilt on higher foundations to keep the rushing water out. Many of the cottage owners have remodeled their homes into year-round residences.

For many years the land on which the cottages are built was leased from the Erie Port Authority on a year-to-year basis. The future was very uncertain. All that changed in 1999, when the 21 owners agreed to buy the properties on which their buildings stood. The average price was $16,000 to purchase a parcel of the property that occupies 0.8 acres of land, with 350 feet of bay frontage. It was formerly part of the 16-acre public park known as Ravine Park, but is now privately owned.

Ferncliff Beach (1903)
Ferncliff Beach (1903)

Ferncliff Beach (1903)
Ferncliff Beach (1903)

Ferncliff Beach (1950′s)
Ferncliff Beach (1950s)


Profile: A Lawyer Looks at Sherlock Holmes

Rich Krisciunas with daughter Emily and wife Kathy

Rich Krisciunas, a veteran attorney and law professor, has prepared a marvelous talk for the Holmes, Doyle, & Friends Seven conference in Dayton, March 27 & 28. Let’s get to know him better.

How and when did you first meet Sherlock Holmes?

I first met Sherlock Holmes as a child in the 60’s watching Basil Rathbone movies on Sunday afternoons on Bill Kennedy’s Showtime television show. I was impressed with how Sherlock Holmes remained calm and cool and was able to use his mind to solve a variety of crimes. I enjoyed the genre of the detective story, and also remember watching the Charlie Chan movies as well.

How and when did you become a Sherlockian?

There are many layers to this answer. I watched the movies in the early 60’s. I started reading the stories in the Canon. I am the kind of person who becomes obsessed with anything I do. I throw all of my energy into a subject. So as I went to law school in 1972, my focus was on my studies. I became a trial lawyer at the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office in 1976 and attended a meeting of the Amateur Mendicant Society in Detroit and began subscribing to the Baker Street Journal. I read the journals in what spare time I had, but I only had time to read one book a year during Christmas break when the courts were closed My wife would buy me a Sherlock Holmes pastiche, like The Seven-Percent Solution and The West End Horror by Nicholas Meyer or The Adventure of the Sanguinary Count and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Holmes by Loren D. Estleman. She also bought me a deerstalker which I wore in the winters.

Over the years, I played softball four or five nights a week. After my daughter was born in 1985, I threw myself into being Emily’s dad. I coached my daughter’s soccer team for 12 years. I coached high school soccer. I taught Trial Practice as an adjunct professor in law school for 38 years. I taught a Criminal Trial Clinic and was Director of Externships at Detroit Mercy School of Law. These duties interrupted my ability to focus on the Canon.

Ultimately, three years ago, I retired and looked for something else to do in addition to playing golf. I Googled Sherlock Holmes scions and discovered several in my midst. I started attending meetings, which forced me to read a different story for each meeting. I tried to read as much scholarship about each story as I could find. I bought the CD of old Baker Street Journals and read articles about every tangential topic so that I could contribute something meaningful to the discussions at the meetings. The more I read, the more meetings I attended, the more I enjoyed the new friendships I had made.

Your topic for the Dayton conference is “No Obstruction, but Much Collusion: The Alleged Crimes of Sherlock Holmes and Doctor John Watson.” There are many such apparent crimes! Has this been a fascination of yours as you read the Canon over the years?

As a criminal trial lawyer, when I watch a movie or read a story, I always consider how a case would be prosecuted in a real courtroom. There are so many movies that leave me shaking my head, saying, “That would never happen in court.” As I read the Canon, I always think about the evidence and what I would argue in a closing argument to convince a jury or what I would say in an opening statement to capture a juror’s attention. How would I defend the person accused by Holmes or how would I defend Holmes for the crimes he committed? I would always think about how the Crown could prove a case beyond a reasonable doubt. Which witnesses would have to testify? Would they be willing or able to testify?  How would the defense cross-examine them, and would they be credible? It’s easy to say that Holmes broke into a house to steal some papers or he carried a gun, but it’s quite another thing to be able to go into a courtroom and find a witness with personal knowledge who could testify to their observations in front of a judge and jury. As I examined all the crimes that Holmes and Watson allegedly committed, I thought about writing my paper and sharing my experience as a trial lawyer.

Tell us a little about your law career – especially how it has been affected by Sherlock Holmes.     

I graduated from the University of Detroit School of Law in 1975. I had worked as a student intern in the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office in Detroit, Michigan during my third year in law school. I had worked in a special unit that prosecuted repeat offenders and serial rapists, robbers and murderers. I had a chance to watch some of the best trial lawyers in the state. I also played shortstop on the office softball team and batted cleanup. After I passed the bar, I was hired by the prosecutor’s office. I always joked that I was hired on the basis of my athletic ability.

I was an introvert and assumed I was going to be an appellate prosecutor because I had written several appeal briefs as a student. I never saw myself as being a trial lawyer.But when I came in to work on my first day, I was assigned to the Trial Division to work for the manager of the softball team, who was the chief of the Trial Division.

He told me to watch a jury trial on a rape case. I watched the trial and took notes on jury selection and evidentiary objections and closing arguments. After the trial ended, I told my boss that I was ready for some more training. He handed me a file and said, “Go try this misdemeanor jury trial.” I tried the case and he gave me another jury trial. Next week, I tried three more jury trials. I had tried five misdemeanor jury trials in six days. It was Friday and I was sitting in my office when a prosecutor came into my office and said, “Hey kid, you want to try an Armed Robbery?” “Whoa. I’ve never tried a felony case. Will you sit with me?” “Sure,” he said. He lied. When the jury came in, he disappeared and I tried the case by myself. I ended up winning my first nine jury trials. I was trying cases every day. Robberies, drug cases, bad checks, breaking-and-enterings, rapes, thefts and homicides.

Within a year, the judge I was assigned to, who had been a former prosecutor, wrote a letter to the elected prosecutor and praised my ability as a trial lawyer. I was promoted to the Prosecutor’s Repeat Offenders Bureau (PROB), the same unit I had worked in as a law student intern two years before. I continued trying high visibility cases in that unit for several years until I was promoted to become the special prosecutor assigned to the Detroit Police Department’s Felony Murder Squad Seven headed by Inspector Gilbert Hill, who gained fame for acting in the movie Beverly Hills Cop with Eddie Murphy. For two years, I handled nothing but Murder First Degree trials. In seven years, I had tried over 150 hundred jury trials and another 400 bench trials. Ultimately, I became a supervising attorney, responsible for the prosecution of 4,000-5,000 cases a year and training new assistant prosecutors, and retired, after 28 years in the office, as the Chief of the Trial Division.

I rose through the ranks very quickly. I think what made me successful was, like Holmes, my attention to detail and my ability to keep an open mind. I felt that no one could outwork me. I thought I needed to be as prepared as possible to make up for my weaknesses as an introvert and my lack of experience. I began my preparation for trial in every case in an unorthodox way as a prosecutor. Instead of thinking how I would convict the defendant, I started by assuming that I was prosecuting an innocent man. I looked at the defendant’s story as if it were true and tried to corroborate the defendant’s theory of the case. If the defendant was really at work, as he claimed, there would be records at his place of employment that would confirm it. I subpoenaed the records and found that he was off on the day of the crime. I looked for physical evidence of injuries, witnesses who could corroborate the defendant’s claims, common sense explanations for apparently guilty behavior. Ultimately, I could poke holes in every defendant’s story and that helped me build a stronger case for conviction. I found that many times, my case ended up being so strong that most defendants elected to plead guilty rather than go to trial.

In the Canon, there are many examples of cases where Holmes would do some investigation that would prove that the man he suspected was not being truthful. In “The Speckled Band,” for instance, Holmes looked at the will of Grimesby Roylott’s widow to see how much he stood to lose if his stepdaughters married. In that way, he determined Roylott’s motive to kill his stepdaughters. It’s that extra bit of knowledge that helped Holmes solve a case.

After I retired as a prosecutor in 2004, I decided to take court-appointed criminal cases so I could take my students to court. I defended clients for 12 years until I gave up my practice. Now, I work one day a week as a city attorney prosecuting traffic and misdemeanor offenses in my local district court. I also golf four times a week with my friends. This gives me much free time to read the Canon and related books and articles.

What Sherlockian groups do you belong to?

I joined the Ribston-Pippins, the Amateur Mendicant Society of Detroit, The Greek Interpreters of East Lansing, and the Bootmakers of Toronto. I subscribe to the Baker Street Journal and listen faithfully to Scott Monty’s podcasts “I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere” and “Trifles.”

Besides Holmes, Doyle, & Friends, what other major Sherlockian events are on your calendar this year?

I am hoping to attend the BSI Conference at West Point, New York in July and was thinking about attending “Holmes in the Heartland” in St. Louis.

What has it meant to you to be part of the Sherlockian community?

I have really enjoyed being part of the Sherlockian community. With only one exception, everyone has been warm and welcoming. There are some really smart people who play the game. I have learned so much about many different aspects of the Canon’s stories – the era, London, history, Baker Street, etc. I have been surprised by how many people who don’t belong to a scion enjoy talking about Sherlock Holmes. We have a lot in common.

What else is up your Sherlockian sleeve?

I have written a paper on who killed Charles Augustus Milverton. Spoiler alert. He is a close personal friend of Doctor John Watson.

You can still register here for Holmes, Doyle, & Friends Seven, March 27-28.

Prince Peter, Future Heir to the Serbian Royal Legacy, Celebrates His Fortieth Birthday


Today, Hereditary Prince Peter of Serbia marks his fortieth birthday.

Crown Prince Alexander of Serbia and Princess Maria da Glória of Orléans-Braganza on their wedding day.
Prince Regent Paul of Yugoslavia can be seen to the far right of the photograph.
The Royal Wedding of the Karageorgevich and Orléans-Braganza.
(left to right): Prince Juan Carlos of Spain, the Count of Paris, Princess Sofía of Spain with her children (Infante Felipe, Infanta Cristina, and Infanta Elena), the Countess of Barcelona, Princess Maria da Glória, Prince Alexander, Princess Anne, King Constantine of Greece (with his children Crown Prince Pavlos and Princess Alexia in the front), Infante Alfonso of Spain, and Queen Anne-Marie of Greece.
The newlyweds: Crown Prince Alexander and Crown Princess Maria da Glória of Serbia.
The Chicago Tribune of 6 February 1980 heralds Prince Peter's arrival.
On 5 February 1980, the prince was born at Chicago, Illinois, as the first child of Crown Prince Alexander of Serbia (b.1945) and Princess Maria da Glória of Orléans-Braganza (b.1946). Alexander and Maria da Glória had married in 1972. Their infant son's name paid tribute to both the father and mother's fathers: King Peter II of Yugoslavia (1923 - 1970) and Prince Pedro Gastão of Orléans-Braganza (1913 - 2007). At his christening, Hereditary Prince Peter received his cousin Prince Alexander of Yugoslavia (1924 - 2016), the only surviving son of Prince Regent Paul of Yugoslavia and Princess Olga (née Greece and Denmark), as his godfather.

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Peter was followed by two younger brothers: the fraternal twin princes Philip and Alexander (b.1982). In 1985, the marriage of Crown Prince Alexander and Princess Maria da Glória ended in divorce. By the end of 1985, Peter and his brothers had gained a new stepmother and stepfather. In September 1985, Crown Prince Alexander of Serbia married Katherine Clairy Batis (b.1945) at the Orthodox Church in London. In October 1985, Princess Maria da Glória married don Ignacio de Medina y Fernández de Córdoba, 19th Duke of Segorbe (b.1947). Peter gained two sister's from his mother's second marriage: Sol (b.1986) and Luna (b.1988).

Hereditary Prince Peter of Serbia
Prince Peter graduated from The King’s School Canterbury in England. There the prince obtained three A levels in Art, French and Spanish. Peter then completed an art foundation course at the Camberwell College of Arts in London. The hereditary prince then pursued studies in graphic design at the Rhode Island School of Design. It is in this field that Prince Peter currently works as a graphic design professional.
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Hereditary Prince Peter of Serbia lives in London. Although all three reside in different countries, Peter is very close to his brothers Philip and Alexander. After his father Crown Prince Alexander, Peter is first in the line of succession to the Headship of the Royal House of Serbia. Prince Peter is also in the line of succession to the British throne. The hereditary prince is often present in Serbia to support his father Crown Prince Alexander, Crown Princess Katherine, and their family in their activities.

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We wish Prince Peter many happy returns of the day!

Crown Prince Alexander of Serbia and his three sons (left to right): Hereditary Prince Peter, Prince Philip, and Prince Alexander.

+++++++

The Ancestry of Hereditary Prince Peter of Serbia

1. Hereditary Prince Peter of Serbia (b.Chicago, Illinois, USA 5 February 1980)

Parents

2. Crown Prince Alexander of Serbia (b.London 17 July 1945)
who married at Villamanrique de la Condesa, Seville, Spain on 1 July 1972 (divorced 1985)
3. Princess Maria da Glória of Orléans-Braganza (b.Petrópolis 13 December 1946)

Grandparents

4. King Peter II of Yugoslavia (Belgrade 6 September 1923 - Denver, Colorado, USA 3 November 1970)
who married at London on 20 March 1944
5. Princess Alexandra of Greece (Athens 25 March 1921 - Burges Hills, nr Lewes 30 January 1993)
6. Prince Pedro Gastão of Orléans-Braganza (Château d'Eu 19 February 1913 - Seville 27 December 2007)
who married at Seville on 18 December 1944
7. Princess Esperanza of Bourbon-Two Sicilies (Madrid 14 June 1914 - Villamanrique de la Condesa 8 August 2005)

Great-Grandparents 

8. King Alexander of Yugoslavia (Cetinje, Montenegro 16 December 1888 - Marseilles 9 October 1934)
who married at Belgrade on 8 June 1922
9. Princess Marie of Romania (Gotha 8 January 1900 - London 22 June 1961)
10. King Alexander of the Hellenes (Tatoi 1 August 1893 - Athens 25 October 1920)
who married at Athens on 4 November 1919
11. Aspasia Manos (Athens 4 September 1896 - Venice 7 August 1972)
12. Prince Pedro de Alcântara of Orléans-Braganza, Prince of Grão Pará (Petrópolis 15 October 1875 - Petrópolis 29 January 1940)
who married at Versailles on 14 November 1908
13. Countess Elisabeth Dobrzensky von Dobrzenicz (Chotebor, Bohemia 7 December 1875 - Sintra, Portugal 11 June 1951)
14. Prince Carlo of Bourbon-Two Sicilies, Infante of Spain (Gries 10 November 1870 - Seville 11 November 1949)
who married 2ndly at Woodnorton, Worchester, United Kingdom on 16 November 1907
15. Princess Louise d'Orléans (Cannes 24 February 1882 - Seville 18 April 1958)

The 50th Birthday of Princess Marilène of Orange-Nassau, van Vollenhoven

Princess Marilène
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Today, H.H. Princess Marilène of Orange-Nassau, van Vollenhoven-van den Broek celebrates her fiftieth birthday.

Groningen University
The princess was born at Dieren on 4 February 1970 as Marie-Hélène (Marilène) Angela van den Broek, the younger daughter of (now retired) diplomat and politician Hans van den Broek (b.1936) and his wife Josée (née van Schendel). Marilène attended primary school in Velp, a town not far from where she was born. Beginning in 1988, Marilène went on to study Business Administration and Marketing at Groningen University. She also did a stent at Leuven University in Belgium. Marilène graduated from Groningen University in 1994.

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While at university in 1989, Marilène van den Broek met Prince Maurits of Orange-Nassau, van Vollenhoven (b.1968), the eldest son of Princess Margriet of the Netherlands (b.1943) and her husband Pieter van Vollenhoven, Jr. (b.1939). A relationship developed between the Maurits and Marilène over the years, and they announced their engagement in November 1997. The couple were married in a civil ceremony on 29 May 1998, which was followed by a religious ceremony on 30 May. Princess Juliana, the former Queen and the grandmother of Maurits, as well as Queen Beatrix and Prince Claus along with their children all attended Maurits and Marilène's civil and religious wedding ceremonies.

Marilène's workplace: Koninklijke Ahold NV headquarters at Zaandam.
After her graduation, Marilène started her career as a management trainee at Dutch international retailer Koninklijke Ahold NV. She worked at the company in a variety of commercial and marketing positions until the end of 2005. Beginning in 2006, she started to a part-time position at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, where she still works. Princess Marilène's hobbies include tennis, skating and running - in fact, she and Maurits ran the New York City marathon in 1997!

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Princess Marilène and Prince Maurits have three children: Anna (b. 2001), Lucas (b. 2002), and Felicia (b. 2005). The couple's offspring use the surname "van Lippe-Biesterfeld van Vollenhoven."

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We wish Princess Marilène many happy returns of the day!

Luxembourg Police Open Inquiry Into Violence At Grand Ducal Court

Today, 4 February, the Justice Department in Luxembourg announced that the police had opened a preliminary investigations into credible reports of violence at Le Cour.

The following statement was released by the Prosecutor's Office:
The Luxembourg prosecutor's office has opened a preliminary investigation in the context of the statements made during the RTL Presseclub broadcast on February 2, 2020, where physical violence at the Grand-Ducal Court was discussed . 
The judicial police service was requested to carry out certain investigative duties. 
The Luxembourg public prosecutor's office will await the conclusions of the investigation to decide on the possible consequences.
A number of employees in the employ of the Grand Ducal Family have apparently made credible reports that they were physically assaulted on the job.

This news from La Justice comes on the tail of the Waringo Report being released last week. The report documented working conditions at the Grand Ducal Court and offered recommendations about how the institution could be improved.

Sources:
COMMUNIQUÉ DE PRESSE DU PARQUET DE LUXEMBOURG EN RELATION AVEC DES DÉCLARATIONS QUI ONT ÉTÉ FAITES LORS DE L’ÉMISSION RTL PRESSECLUB
Gewalt am Hof: Ermittlungen eingeleitet

2020 Yılı Türkiye Nüfus Haritası

TÜİK 2019 yılının sonuç verilerini açıkladı.


Bu verilere göre 2020 yılına hangi nüfus yapısıyla girdiğimizi görebiliyoruz. Bir coğrafyacı olarak bu durum tabii ki de beni yakından ilgilendiriyor.


Öncelikle paylaşılan verilere harita üzerinden bakmak gerekirse karşımıza aşağıdaki gibi bir görüntü çıkıyor.
2020 Yılına Girerken Türkiye'nin İl Bazlı Nüfus Dağılımı
Yukarıdaki harita üzerinde ülkemizde il bazlı nüfus dağılımını görebilirsiniz. Bu haritada sadece nüfus miktarlarının yer aldığını lütfen unutmayın. Buna göre;

  • En kalabalık ilimiz yine İstanbul oldu ve İstanbul’un nüfusu, bir önceki yıla göre 451 bin 543 kişi artarak 15 milyon 519 bin 267 kişiye ulaştı. 
  • Türkiye nüfusunun %18,66’sının ikamet ettiği İstanbul’u, 5 milyon 639 bin 76 kişi ile Ankara takip etti. 
  • İzmir ise 4 milyon 367 bin 251 kişi ile üçüncü sırada yerini buldu, 
  • 3 milyon 56 bin 120 kişi ile Bursa dördüncü sıraya yerleşti ve  
  • 2 milyon 511 bin 700 kişi ile Antalya beşinci sıraya ulaştı.

İlçe bazlı durumu kontrol ederken ise miktardan çok artışları göz önünde bulundurmak gerekiyor. Buna göre ilçelerimizdeki nüfus artış ve azalış oranları şöyle:
2020 Yılına Girerken Türkiye'deki İlçelerin Nüfus Artış ve Azalış Durumları
Haritaya bakınca temel olarak merkezi ilçelerimizin göç aldığını taşrada kalan ilçelerimizin ise göç verdiğini görmekteyiz. Bunun temel sebepleri;

  • İş imkanları merkezi ilçelerde daha fazla,
  • İmkanlara ulaşma kabiliyeti merkezi ilçelerde daha yüksek, 
  • Sosyal faaliyetler merkezi ilçelerde daha yüksek,
  • Eğitim faaliyetleri genel olarak merkezi ilçelerde yapılıyor.

Verileri indirmek için TÜİK sitesini ziyaret edebilirsiniz ayrıca geometrik verileri indirmek için www.cbsakademi.net adresini de ziyaret edebilirsiniz.

Kaynak:

Reynmen Kimdir?

reynmen before after

Gerçek adı Yusuf Aktaş'tır. Sosyal medyada Reynmen adı ile bilinmektedir. 1995 İstanbul doğumludur. Aslen Sivaslı'dır. İki kardeşi vardır. Radyo ve Televizyon Programcılığı okumuştur. Scorp isimli video paylaşım uygulaması sayesinde büyük bir takipçisi kitlesine ulaşmıştır. Daha sonra bunu bir iş haline getirmiş ve Youtuber olmaya karar vermiştir. Çektiği videolarla kısa sürede 1 milyon takipçiye ulaşmıştır.

reynmen vücuduKariyerindeki başarı basamaklarını hızlı bir şekilde tırmanan Reynmen, daha sonra müzik sektörüne girmeye karar vermiştir. Lil Bege lakaplı Berkcan Güven ile birlikte #Biziz şarkısını yapmış ve şarkı uzun bir süre trendlerde kalmıştır.

Müziğin peşini bırakmayan Reynmen kısa süre sonra Derdim Olsun şarkısını çıkarmıştır. Klibi ile de oldukça dikkat çeken bu şarkı sayesinde artık Reynmen'in adı Youtube ile değil, müzik ile anılmaya başlanmıştır. Müzik kariyerindeki başarısını Rnbesk adlı albüm ile taçlandırmıştır.

Reynmen'in Şarkılarından Birkaçı

  • #Biziz
  • Derdim Olsun
  • Ela
  • Hevesim Yok
  • Leila
  • Dolunay
  • Radyoda Neşet

    Reynmen 90 günlük vücut değişim videosu ile oldukça dikkat çekmiştir. Kişisel antrenör ile çalışan Reynmen, gerçekten istenildiğinde kısa sürede fit ve kaslı bir vücut elde edilebileceğini kanıtlamıştır.

    Reynmen Boy ve Kilosu

    Reynmen 1.78 boya ve 83 kilo vücut ağırlığına sahiptir.

    Estetik Vücutlar kategorimizdeki diğer yazılara ulaşmak için buraya tıklayabilirsiniz.

    Kişisel Yorumum : "Kısa sürede elde ettiği bu başarı takdiri hak ediyor."

    A Noble Engagement: Countess Who Descends From The Saxe-Coburgs Engaged To Czech Count

    Recently, the engagement between Count Benno Czernin-Kinsky (b.1990) and Countess Antonia von Mensdorff-Pouilly (b.1992) has been announced.

    Princess Sophie of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld
    Antonia is a Saxe-Coburg descendant: she is a great-great-great-granddaughter of Princess Sophie of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld (1778-1835). In 1804, Sophie married Emmanuel von Mensdorff-Pouilly (1777-1852). Sophie of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld was the sister of the eventual King Leopold I of the Belgians, as well as an aunt to Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom and her husband Prince Consort Albert.

    Benno is the son of Count Stanislaus Czernin-Kinsky (b.1961) and Countess Andrea (b.1963; née Gräfin Révay von Szklabinya), who married in 1988. Benno works on the Rosenhof Forest Estate, which is owned by his family. Antonia is the daughter of Count Andreas von Mensdorff-Pouilly (b.1956) and Countess Nikola (b.1967; née Hatschek), who married in 1991.

    Count Johann Rudolf Czernin von Chudenitz
    Benno and Antonia are sixth cousins once removed. They are both descendants of Count Prokop Adalbert Czernin von Chudenitz (1726-1777). Benno descends from Count Johann Rudolf Czernin von Chudenitz (1757-1845), the only son of Prokop Adalbert and his first wife Countess Maria Antonia von Colloredo (1728-1757). Antonia descends from Count Wolfgang Czernin von Chudenitz (1766-1813), the only son of Prokop Adalbert and his second wife Theresia Reisky von Dubnitz (1736-1780). 

    Seong Hwan Kim

    Seong Hwan Kim
    Olympia Competition Fall 2019