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Lidia and Zamenhof
Zamenhof and his wife Klara raised three children, a son, Adam, and two daughters, Sofia and Lidia.
Lidia Zamenhof was a Bahá ' í, and several leading Baha ' is have spoken Esperanto.
In the 1920s and 30s certain notable Bahá ' ís such as Martha Root, Lidia Zamenhof and Hermann Grossmann — the founder of the Bahá ' í Esperanto magazine La Nova Tago — were active in the Esperanto movement.
The translation of John E. Esslemont's " Bahá ' u ' lláh and the New Era " — the most widely known introduction to the Bahá ' í Faith — into Esperanto had been initiated by Martha Root and carried to completion by Lidia Zamenhof.
This is followed by two essays by and about Lidia Zamenhof, which show how the youngest daughter of Zamenhof found her spiritual home in the Bahá ' í Religion.
Today there exists an active sub-community of Bahá ' í Esperantists ; the Bahá ' í Esperanto-League was founded in 1973, and Lidia Zamenhof, daughter of Esperanto founder L. L.
There have been a large number of women heroines who are celebrated in the history of the Bahá ' í Faith including Táhirih, Navváb, Queen Marie, Bahíyyih Khánum, Martha Root, Lidia Zamenhof, and many others.

Lidia and adult
* Lidia Quaranta ... Cabiria, as an adult

Lidia and became
Through her friendship with Martha Root, Lidia accepted Bahá ’ u ’ lláh and became a member of the Bahá ’ í faith.
His older sister Inna Obraztsova graduated Leningrad Conservatory and became a composer and lecturer of musical theory, his younger sister Victoria Lotman was a prominent cardiologist, and his third sister Lidia Lotman was a scholar of Russian literature of the second half of 19th century on staff at the Institute for Russian Literature of the Russian Academy of Science ( Pushkin House ) ( she lived in Saint-Petersburg ).
Forming from a tropical wave on September 8, Lidia steadily organized and became a hurricane on September 10.
Meanwhile, under the management of Lidia Geringer de Odenberg, in 1998 Wratislavia Cantans became a member of the New York ’ s International Society for the Performing Arts Foundation.

Lidia and America
Shows regularly carried on Create include Lidia ’ s Italy, P. Allen Smith ’ s Garden Home, The Joy of Painting, America ’ s Test Kitchen and Gourmet's Diary of a Foodie.

Lidia and .
His parents, Daniel Ortega and Lidia Saavedra, were opposed to the regime of Anastasio Somoza Debayle.
Lidia Skoblikova won two gold medals in 1960 and four in 1964.
The test of fidelity is previously recorded in French ( a fabliau ) and Latin ( Lidia, an elegiac comedy ), but comes originally from India or Persia.
Kandinsky was born in Moscow, the son of Lidia Ticheeva and Vasily Silvestrovich Kandinsky, a tea merchant.
* The presence and rise of a significant number of women as heads of state and heads of government in a number of countries across the world, many being the first women to hold such positions, such as Soong Ching-ling continuing as the first Chairwoman of the People's Republic of China until 1972, Isabel Martínez de Perón as the first woman President in Argentina in 1974 until being deposed in 1976, Elisabeth Domitien becomes the first woman Prime Minister of Lesotho, Indira Gandhi continuing as Prime Minister of India until 1977, Lidia Gueiler Tejada becoming the interim President of Bolivia beginning from 1979 to 1980, Maria de Lourdes Pintasilgo becoming the first woman Prime Minister of Portugal in 1979, and Margaret Thatcher becoming the first woman Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.
** In Bolivia, General Luis Gracia Meza leads a bloody coup d ' état against the elected government of Lidia Gayler.
* Members of Secretariat: José Ramón Machado Ventura, Esteban Lazo Hernández, Abelardo Álvarez Gil, José Ramón Balaguer Cabrera, Víctor Gaute López, Olga Lidia Tapia Iglesias.
Italian American TV personalities, such as Mario Batali, Giada DeLaurentiis, Rachael Ray and Lidia Bastianich were hosting popular cooking shows featuring Italian cuisine.
It was adapted by Diana Gould, Lidia Ravera, Dino Risi and Bernardino Zapponi.
He also has four sisters, Angela, Juanita, Emma, and Agustina, and two half siblings, Lidia and Pedro Emilio, who were raised by Ángel Castro's first wife.
* The Art and Science of Rational Eating, with Mike Abrams and Lidia Abrams.
* Theories of Personality: Critical Perspectives, with Mike Abrams, PhD, and Lidia Abrams, PhD.
Theories of Personality: Critical Perspectives, with Mike Abrams, PhD, and Lidia Abrams, PhD.
" In February 1902, Kuprin and Maria Karlovna Davydova were married, their daughter Lidia born in 1903.
* Anania, Lidia ; Luminea, Cecilia ; Melinte, Livia ; Prosan, Ana-Nina ; Stoica, Lucia ; and Ionescu-Ghinea, Neculai, Bisericile osândite de Ceauşescu.
* Lidia Chojecka-a Polish middle distance runner who specializes in the 1500 metres and sometimes 3000 metres.
Others who left ARI were Carlos Raimundi, Leonardo Gorbacz, Delia Bisutti, Nélida Belous, Verónica Venas, Emilio García Méndez, Lidia Naim and María América González.
The badge of prisoner 29659 – Lidia Główczewska.
Vaksberg states that Lidia Konopleva, another SR, was the culprit ; believing it would be all too comforting that Lenin narrowly avoided being assassinated by a woman whose personality is so far from the stereotype of a national hero.
He married Peggy Marguerite Doncaster in the United States on 17 December 1984 and his younger daughters are Lidia Aurora ( born March 1988 ) and Miranda Karina ( July 1995 ), both born in Houston, Texas.
Lidia Costa, Carlos Marques, Alberto Madurai, José Caminos and Railcar Morays are some of the most important names in philharmonic music.

Zamenhof and took
Originally this took the form of a suffix-viro, but in response to criticisms that the resulting words such as bovoviro " bull " were ambiguous with mythological man – animal hybrids such as cherubs ( also bovoviro ), Zamenhof switched to using vir as a prefix in his translation of Genesis in the 1920s.
Zamenhof took most of his Esperanto root words from languages of the Italic and Germanic families, principally Italian, French, German, Yiddish, and English.
In a vote among Esperantists that took place in 1894, however, he voted against changes to the language and, from then on, adhered to the basic principles of the language as originally espoused by Zamenhof, the so-called Fundamento de Esperanto.

Zamenhof and Esperanto
* 1917 – L. L. Zamenhof, Polish creator of Esperanto ( b. 1859 )
* 1859 – L. L. Zamenhof, Polish initiator of Esperanto ( d. 1917 )
* Zamenhof Day ( International Esperanto Community )
Its name derives from Doktoro Esperanto (" Esperanto " translates as " one who hopes "), the pseudonym under which L. L. Zamenhof published the first book detailing Esperanto, the Unua Libro, on July 26, 1887.
The first Esperanto book by L. L. Zamenhof.
Esperanto was created in the late 1870s and early 1880s by Dr. Ludwig Lazarus Zamenhof, an ophthalmologist of mixed cultural heritage from Bialystok, then part of the Russian Empire.
After some ten years of development, which Zamenhof spent translating literature into Esperanto as well as writing original prose and verse, the first book of Esperanto grammar was published in Warsaw in July 1887.
In Germany, there was additional motivation to persecute Esperanto because Zamenhof was Jewish.
The constructed international auxiliary language Esperanto was developed in the 1870s and 80s by L. L. Zamenhof, and first published in 1887.
In its first years Esperanto was used mainly in publications by Zamenhof and early adopters like Antoni Grabowski, in extensive correspondence ( mostly now lost ), in the magazine La Esperantisto, published from 1889 to 1895 and only occasionally in personal encounters.
At this congress, Zamenhof officially resigned his leadership of the Esperanto movement, as he did not want personal prejudice against himself ( or anti-Semitism ) to hinder the progress of the language.
That declaration stated, among other things, that the basis of the language should remain the Fundamento de Esperanto (" Foundation of Esperanto ", a group of early works by Zamenhof ), which is to be binding forever: nobody has the right to make changes to it.
In contrast, Zamenhof declared that " Esperanto belongs to the Esperantists ", and moved to the background once the language was published, allowing others to share in the early development of the language.
* 1859: Lazar Zamenhof, the creator of Esperanto, is born in Białystok, Russia ( now Poland ).
* 1887: Zamenhof marries, and with his wife's help publishes Unua Libro, the book introducing modern Esperanto.
An image of Zamenhof is designed in a text describing his life, reproduced from the Wikipedia article on Esperanto.
Zamenhof suggested Italian as a model for Esperanto pronunciation.
To some extent there are also shared traditions, like the Zamenhof Day, and shared behaviour patterns, like avoiding the usage of one's national language at Esperanto meetings unless there are good reasons for its use ( Esperanto culture has a special word, krokodili (" to crocodile "), to describe this avoided behaviour ).
On December 15 ( L. L. Zamenhof's birthday ), Esperanto speakers around the world celebrate Zamenhof Day, sometimes relabelled Esperanto Book Day.

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