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ā¤ļø Installation of the Vizier šŸ

"The Installation of the vizier, alt. Instruction of Rekhmire, Regulation laid upon the vizier Rekhmire, is an ancient Egyptian text dating to the New Kingdom found in Rekhmire's tomb at Thebes. It describes the office of the Egyptian vizier, his appointment, his duties, his relationships to other officials, and how to behave. Two incomplete copies of the Regulation laid upon the vizier Rekhmire have survived, one in the tomb of Useramen (reign of Thutmose III) and another in the tomb of Amenemope (reign of Amenhotep II.Breasted, op.cit., Ā§ 671 The vizier's main functions according to the Regulation are in the fields of the judiciary, treasury, war, interior, agriculture, and general executive.Breasted, op.cit., Ā§ 672 References * M. Lichtheim, Ancient Egyptian Literature, Vol.2, University of California Press 1976, p. 21-24 * J. H. Breasted, Ancient Records of Egypt, Part Two, Chicago 1906, Ā§Ā§ 665ff. Category:Ancient Egyptian literature Category:Ancient Egyptian viziers "

ā¤ļø LĆ©on Nicole šŸ

"LĆ©on Nicole (10 April 1887 in Montcherand, Vaud ā€“ 28 June 1965 in Geneva) was a prominent trade unionist, journalist, politician and member of the Grand Council of Geneva and the Swiss National Council. In 1933, he was a member of the first Cantonal government in Switzerland with a Socialist majority and the first socialist ever elected to lead a Canton. He was elected the first President of the Swiss Party of Labour in 1944. In 1952 he was expelled from the Party of Labour for expressing sympathy towards Yugoslavia and in 1954 set up a rival communist party called the Progressive Party. Early life Nicole attended school in his home village and Orbe before leaving for further education in St. Gallen. He worked in the postal service from 1905 to 1919, stationed in Geneva from 1911 and was a union leader between 1919 and 1921. He was editor of several socialist newspapers including Labour and Workers' Voice. Political career Nicole joined the Swiss Socialist Party in 1909 and was active as a trade unionist. He was one of the leaders of the 1918 general strike in Geneva, was imprisoned and subsequently acquitted by a military court in 1919. In 1919 he was elected to the National Council as a representative of the Socialist Party. He was also elected to the Grand Council of Geneva in 1919. In 1933, he was the first Socialist to be elected leader of a canton of Switerland, when on 3 December he was voted into the PrĆ©sidence (Presidency) of the Geneva Council of State, the executive body of the Republic and Canton of Geneva. References External links * Category:1887 births Category:1965 deaths Category:Swiss Party of Labour politicians "

ā¤ļø Marcela Agoncillo šŸ

"DoƱa Marcela MariƱo Agoncillo (MariƱo y Coronel; June 24, 1859 ā€“ May 30, 1946) was Filipina renowned as the principal seamstress of the first and official flag of the Philippines, gaining her the title of "The Mother of the Philippine Flag." Marcela Coronel MariƱo was the daughter of Don Francisco Diokno MariƱo and DoƱa Eugenia Coronel MariƱo, a rich family in her hometown of Taal, Batangas. She finished her studies at Santa Catalina College, Marcela acquired her learning in music and feminine crafts. At the age of 30, Marcela Coronel MariƱo married Felipe Encarnacion Agoncillo, a Filipino lawyer, and a jurist, and gave birth to six children. Her marriage led an important role in Philippine history. When her husband was exiled in Hong Kong during the outbreak of the Philippine Revolution, Marcela MariƱo Agoncillo and the rest of the family joined him and temporarily resided there to avoid the anti- Filipino hostilities of the occupying Spain. While in Hong Kong, General Emilio Aguinaldo requested her to sew the flag that would represent the Republic of the Philippines. DoƱa Marcela MariƱo de Agoncillo, with her eldest daughter Lorenza and a friend Delfina Herbosa Natividad, niece of Dr. Jose Rizal, manually sewed the flag in accordance with General Emilio Aguinaldo's design which later became the official flag of the Republic of the Philippines. While the flag itself is the perpetual legacy of DoƱa Marcela MariƱo de Agoncillo, she is also commemorated through museums and monuments: like the marker in Hong Kong (where her family temporarily sojourned), at her ancestral home in Taal, Batangas which has been turned into a museum, in paintings by notable painters as well as through other visual arts. Early life Marcela Coronel MariƱo was born on June 24, 1859 in Taal, Batangas, Philippines to Don Francisco Diokno MariƱo and DoƱa Eugenia Coronel MariƱo. She grew up in her ancestral MariƱo house in Taal, Batangas built in the 1770s by her grandparents, Don Andres Sauza MariƱo and DoƱa Eugenia Diokno MariƱo. As a daughter of a rich and religious family, Marcela Coronel MariƱo was referred to in their town as Roselang Bubog which means "a virgin enthroned in the town church". Stories told in the area related that people kept waiting patiently by the church patio for her appearance in the morning to attend mass accompanied either by a maid or an elder relative. Marcela Coronel MariƱo was sent to a convent after her education in Manila. The convent she was studying in was the Santa Catalina College of the Dominican nuns, an exclusive school for girls, established in the Walled City of Intramuros where she finished her elementary and secondary education. In college, she learned Spanish, music, the feminine crafts and social graces. She spent her girlhood partly in their hometown and partly in the convent. Accordingly, Marcela was skilled in needlework. Ancestral House of Marcela MariƱo de Agoncillo in Taal, Batangas Marriage and family Marcela Coronel MariƱo was married to Felipe Encarnacion Agoncillo, a rich Filipino revolutionist (KKK) and the first Filipino diplomat. They were both thirty and Felipe was already a judge when they finally married. The Agoncillo moved from Taal to Manila, where they lived together in a two-story house on M.H. del Pillar St., Malate, near the Malate church. Six daughters were born to them: Lorenza ("Enchang"), Gregoria ("Goring"), Eugenia ("Nene"), Marcela ("Celing", named after her mother because they thought she would be their last child), Adela (who died at the age of three) and the youngest, Maria ("Maring", who was their last surviving child and died on July 6, 1995). Most of her daughters became teachers. Gregoria MariƱo Agoncillo was the first Filipina to graduate from Oxford University. After the graduation of the three elder daughters, they were offered to positions to teach. Lorenza was given an appointment to teach in Malate Catholic School. They so immersed themselves in the respective teaching careers that not one of them chose to be married. However, Maria MariƱo Agoncillo married Leoncio Noble later on in life, with children: Anita MariƱo Agoncillo Noble (Miss Philippines 1926), Froila MariƱo Agoncillo Noble and Vicente MariƱo Agoncillo Noble. DoƱa Marcela MariƱo de Agoncillo cared for all of her daughters until they reached maturity. One of her favorite pieces of advice to them was to "live honestly and well, and to work hard and not depend on family property. Besides the legal services rendered by Felipe to the impoverished, DoƱa Marcela MariƱo Agoncillo and her daughters observed every Thursday as a day of charity, when a queue of needy people seeking alms would form in the Agoncillo driveway. No one ever left their house empty-handed. Agoncillo would hand them a bag of rice in addition to the money she gave them. This practice lasted until the couple retired. Exile in Hong Kong After learning of the plans of the Governor-General of the Philippines (Basilio Augustin y Davila) to deport Don Felipe Encarnacion Agoncillo, he sailed to Yokohama, Japan, staying there only briefly until proceeding to Hong Kong where he joined other Filipino exiles who found asylum when the revolution broke out in 1896. Twenty-two months after the departure of Don Felipe Encarnacion Agoncillo for Hong Kong, the Agoncillos and the rest of the family (her last two daughters were not yet born) followed him into exile. They rented a house at 535 Morrison Hill in the Wan Chai district. While in Hong Kong, Agoncillo gave birth to their last child on March 22, 1906. Don Felipe Encarnacion Agoncillo, being an exile himself, received any Filipino who came into their house. Thereafter, the place became a sanctuary for other Filipino revolutionary exiles. They initiated meetings in the Agoncillo's residence, especially during the critical months of March and April 1898. Among these folks were Gen. Antonio Luna and General Emilio Aguinaldo. Also, Josephine Bracken, Jose Rizal's fiancĆ©e, sought refuge in their house when the Spanish authorities threatened to torture her. =The Making of the Philippine flag= The detail of Fernando Amorsolo's The Making of the Philippine flag depicting Agoncillo and company's manual sewing After the signing of the Pact of Biak-na-Bato on December 14, 1897, General Emilio Aguinaldo visited the Agoncillo residence in Hong Kong after their voluntary exile. After having met them, General Emilio Aguinaldo requested that DoƱa Marcela MariƱo de Agoncillo immediately hand-sew a flag according to his design which would embody the national aspirations of all Filipinos. After receiving the request, DoƱa Marcela MariƱo Agoncillo delegated her eldest daughter, five-year-old Lorenza MariƱo Agoncillo, and Mrs. Delfina Herbosa Natividad, Dr.JosĆ© Rizal's niece by his sister Lucia, to help her make the first Philippine flag. The process took only a short time, but it was difficult. The three worked manually and with the aid of a sewing machine. They had to redo the flag after the rays of the sun were not in the proper direction. Their eyes and hands suffered due to the prolonged work session. Made from 100% fine silk which she bought in Hong Kong, the flag was embroidered in gold and contained stripes of blue and red and a white triangle with the sun and three stars on it. The flag was finished in five days and became known as "The Three Stars and a Sun flag". The thimble used by DoƱa Marcela MariƱo de Agoncillo in sewing the first Philippine flag; on display at Presidential Museum & Library. On May 17, 1898, the flag was delivered personally by Agoncillo and was packed among the things President Emilio Aguinaldo brought back to Manila. This flag was hoisted from the window of Aguinaldo's house in Kawit, Cavite, during the proclamation of Philippine independence on June 12, 1898 accompanied by the Philippine National Anthem Marcha Filipina. However, she did not witness either this first public display of the flag or the time when the flag was unfurled during the Malolos Congress because her husband remained in Hong Kong and she remained with him. In response to the message written by General Emilio Aguinaldo, DoƱa Marcela MariƱo de Agoncillo wrote the following statement when she was interviewed: Post-exile and death DoƱa Marcela MariƱo de Agoncillo and her daughters stayed in Hong Kong from 1895 to 1906. She took care of their house, which became an asylum. Their funds had run out because of the heavy expenses incurred by Don Felipe for his diplomatic activities in France and in the United States. She once had to sell the children's pinafores and their jewels to support her family and to pay for their voyage back to Manila. The other money was also used to help boost the revolutionary funds. Their support for the revolution made them an impoverished family; however, they gained it back when Felipe resumed his legal practice. After the fall of the first Philippine Republic and the establishment of the American regime, DoƱa Marcela MariƱo de Agoncillo and her family ended their exile and went back to Manila as soon as they were fetched by Don Felipe after his diplomatic activities abroad had ended. The Agoncillos settled in their family house in Malate. After the death of Don Felipe, Agoncillo's remaining family suffered from starvation due to their meager supply of food, water and other needs. The Japanese conquerors also contributed to their anguish during the period of the Japanese invasion. Taking this all in stride, Marcela remained pragmatic and a source of inspiration. After their house was incinerated during the Japanese occupation, all she said to her remaining daughters was "We will then have to go to Taal." Though she endured the 1945 Battle of Manila, the health of DoƱa Marcela MariƱo de Agoncillo, who was alternatively called Marcela and "Lola Celay" during her old age, was steadily deteriorating. She continued to mourn her deceased husband to such an extent that her daughters found it necessary to hide all his remaining photographs. On May 30, 1946, she quietly died in Taal at the age of 86. Her mortal remains were brought from Taal to Manila and interred alongside her husband in the Catholic cemetery of La Loma according to the wishes of her last will. Commemoration File:Marcela Agoncillo Old Elementary School.jpg thumbOld Marcela Agoncillo School Building UP campus to commemorate the historical sewing Marcela MariƱo Agoncillo (Batangas Provincial Capitol) Historical marker in the Cemetery Marcela MariƱo de Agoncillo (grave in Cemetery adjoining Santuario del Santo Cristo, San Juan, Metro Manila). (Marcela Agoncillo Elementary School) Several commemorative figures were created in remembrance of Agoncillo's historic family. On November 27, 1955, a marker was erected by the National Historical Institute of the Philippines and a museum was established in Taal, Batangas in accordance with her last wish and was named Marcela MariƱo de Agoncillo Museum and Monument. The museum is MariƱo-Agoncillo ancestral house. The house- turned-museum permanently exhibits flags and a diorama depicting the sewing of the first flag. A bronze statue of her holding the flag was erected outside the house in its garden. In Hong Kong, a historical marker was created by the Hong Kong Antiquities Council at Morrison Hill Park to commemorate the site where the first Philippine flag was sewn. However, the place where the Agoncillos resided, the location of the Hong Kong Junta, and other locations of historical importance to Filipinos remain unmarked. DoƱa Marcela MariƱo de Agoncillo's legacy is remembered through the visual arts as well. In 1996, Filipino National Artist Napoleon Abueva created the concrete and marble sculpture Three Women Weaving the Filipino Flag at the UP Diliman to commemorate Agoncillo and the other two women who assisted her in their important task.Moreover, The Marcela Agoncillo Elementary School is made to honor her. Renowned Filipino painter Fernando Amorsolo painted the historical sewing and is nationally known as The Making of the Philippine flag. In popular culture *Portrayed by Iza Calzado in 2010 official music video GMA Lupang Hinirang *Portrayed by Maita Ejercito in the 2012 film, El Presidente. See also *Lorenza Agoncillo References Category:Flags of the Philippines Category:People from Taal, Batangas Category:People from Malate, Manila Category:1859 births Category:1946 deaths Category:Flag designers Category:Artists from Batangas Category:Katipunan members Category:People of the Philippine Revolution Category:Burials at La Loma Cemetery "

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