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Melchett and founded
Tel Mond was founded in 1929 by Sir Alfred Moritz Mond, later known as Lord Melchett, a former British minister and president of the British Zionist Federation.

Melchett and Tel
Its building on the corner of Melchett and Shenkin streets in Tel Aviv was demolished and replaced by an apartment block.
The home of Lord Melchett has been turned into House of the Lord museum, documenting the history of Tel Mond.

Melchett and Mond
* Henry Mond, 2nd Baron Melchett his wife, Amy Gwen Wilson, and writer Gilbert Cannan.
Alfred Mond, 1st Baron Melchett
* Alfred Moritz Mond, 1st Baron Melchett ( 1868 – 1930 )
* Henry Ludwig Mond, 2nd Baron Melchett ( 1898 – 1949 )
* Julian Edward Alfred Mond, 3rd Baron Melchett ( 1925 – 1973 )
* Peter Robert Henry Mond, 4th Baron Melchett ( b. 1948 )
# REDIRECT Alfred Mond, 1st Baron Melchett
Alfred Moritz Mond, 1st Baron Melchett PC, FRS ( 23 October 1868 – 27 December 1930 ), known as Sir Alfred Mond, Bt, between 1910 and 1928, was a British industrialist, financier and politician.
# REDIRECT Alfred Mond, 1st Baron Melchett
After an unsuccessful relationship with Mary, a daughter of Alfred Mond, 1st Baron Melchett, he married the Welsh novelist Hilda Vaughan in 1923.
# REDIRECT Peter Mond, 4th Baron Melchett
Peter Robert Henry Mond, 4th Baron Melchett ( born 24 February 1948 ), son of the British Steel Corporation Chairman Sir Julian Mond and Sonia Melchett ( now Sinclair ), was educated at Eton and Cambridge, where he read Law.
# REDIRECTAlfred Mond, 1st Baron Melchett

Melchett and now
Melchett also started building what is now one of the few private houses on the shore of the Sea of Galilee, now known as Villa Melchett.

Melchett and .
Each series was set in a different historical period with the two protagonists accompanied by different characters, though several reappear in one series or another, for example Melchett and Lord Flashheart.
General Melchett ( Stephen Fry ) rallies his troops from a French château thirty-five miles from the front, where he is aided and abetted by his assistant, Captain Darling ( Tim McInnerny ), pencil-pusher supreme and Blackadder's nemesis, whose name is played on for maximum comedic value.
For example, Baldrick is reduced to making coffee from mud and cooking rats, while General Melchett hatches a plan for the troops to walk very slowly toward the German lines, because " it'll be the last thing Fritz will expect.
It is set on the turn of the millennium, and features Lord Blackadder placing a bet with his friends – modern versions of Queenie ( Miranda Richardson ), Melchett ( Stephen Fry ), George ( Hugh Laurie ) and Darling ( Tim McInnerny ) – that he has built a working time machine.
Notable acting roles include the lead in the film Wilde, Melchett in the BBC television series Blackadder, the titular character in the the television series Kingdom, a recurring guest role as Dr. Gordon Wyatt on the crime series Bones and as Gordon Deitrich in the dystopian thriller V for Vendetta.
There is also usually another main character who is on a par with him in terms of intelligence and serves as someone for him to play games of one-upmanship with, such as Lord Melchett and Captain Darling, but these characters are typically sycophantic toadies who suck up to their superiors like Queenie and General Melchett, whom Blackadder himself is also forced to reluctantly serve.
His main concerns are pleasing his Queen, depicted here as a childish, spoiled tyrant, and in outwitting his various contemporary rivals, usually in the form of Lord Melchett, for her favour.
Blackadder's attempts to escape are opposed by Melchett, who does not realise the futility of the war, and Melchett's assistant Captain Darling, who does.
In London, Lord Melchett demanded his arrest for orchestrating all anti-British unrest throughout the Middle East.
Bialik, Léon Blum, Albert Einstein, Immanuel Löw, Lord Melchett and Herbert Samuel.
Melchett is a family line of fictional characters appearing in the British television sitcom series Blackadder, played by Stephen Fry.
There were two main Melchetts: Lord Melchett and General Melchett.
The first Melchett appeared in series two of Blackadder.
He is Lord Chamberlain to Queen Elizabeth I. Affectionately known to the Queen as " Melchy ", the earnest Lord Melchett has set himself up as her closest personal advisor and is always close to her.
Melchett attends the Annual Communion Wine-Tasting and is also able to officiate at marriage ceremonies, two facts which suggest that he has a career in the church alongside his duties to the Queen.
Despite ( or perhaps because of ) Melchett's toadying, the Queen has an undying affection for Blackadder and often ignores Melchett.
In " Potato ", Melchett pressures Blackadder to sail around the deadly Cape of Good Hope, confident that the journey would be fatal.
He gets the last laugh, however, by eventually returning to a hero's welcome and giving Melchett ( and Sir Walter Raleigh ) a " fine wine from the Far East " as a souvenir-which turned out to be a bottle of Baldrick's urine.
In " Chains ", it is revealed that, as a young man, Melchett had sex with a sheep named Flossie ( in fact Prince Ludwig the Indestructible in disguise ) while at a monastery in Cornwall.
Blackadder's Christmas Carol shows Blackadder getting the last laugh, as he tricks both Melchett and the Queen into " autographing " a death warrant that condemns Melchett to be executed, and leaves Blackadder with all his property.

founded and town
He was worshipped as Acraephius ( ; Ἀκραιφιος, Akraiphios, literally " Acraephian ") or Acraephiaeus ( ; Ἀκραιφιαίος, Akraiphiaios, literally " Acraephian ") in the Boeotian town of Acraephia ( Ἀκραιφία ), reputedly founded by his son Acraepheus ; and as Smintheus ( ; Σμινθεύς, Smintheus, " Sminthian "— that is, " of the town of Sminthos or Sminthe ") near the Troad town of Hamaxitus.
In the Islamic times, a pseudo-etymology was produced by the historian Ahmad ibn Yahya al-Baladhuri ( d. 892 ) quoting a folk story that the town was presumably founded by one " Abbad bin Hosayn " from the Arabian Tribe of Banu Tamim, who established a garrison there during the governorship of Hajjaj in the Ummayad period.
Bœotus ( accompanied by Arne ) went to southern Thessaly, and founded Boeotia ; but Aeolus went to a group of islands in the Tyrrhenian Sea, which received from him the name of the Aeolian Islands ; according to some accounts this Aeolus founded the town of Lipara.
Arbroath Abbey, in the Scottish town of Arbroath, was founded in 1178 by King William the Lion for a group of Tironensian Benedictine monks from Kelso Abbey.
The present town of Ajaccio was founded in 1492 south of the Christian village by the Bank of Saint George at Genoa, which dispatched Cristoforo of Gandini, an architect, to build it.
The town has one of the two Welsh-medium primary schools in Monmouthshire, Ysgol Gymraeg y Fenni, which was founded in the early 1990s.
The traditional legend has it that Byzas from Megara ( a town near Athens ), founded Byzantium in 657 BC, when he sailed northeast across the Aegean Sea.
The town of Barcelonnette was founded in 1231 by Ramon Berenguer IV, Count of Provence.
St. Petroc founded a monastery in Bodmin in the sixth century and gave the town its alternative name of Petrockstow.
Since 2011 the town has also been host to the annual Charlie Chaplin Comedy Film Festival, which was founded to celebrate Chaplin's legacy and to showcase new comic talent.
In 1636, Harvard College was founded by the colony to train ministers and the new town was chosen for its site by Thomas Dudley.
General Tipton was upset by the name change and decided to leave the newly founded town.
The town grew up around the Benedictine Cluny Abbey, founded by Duke William I of Aquitaine in 910.
Ennius was born at Rudiae, an old Italian ( predominantly Oscan ) town historically founded by the Messapians.
In whatever cities they founded the ultimate authority was the commander of the town, who kept office in the citadel, typically used as a prison.
An area was founded in southeast Rome to build a town exclusively for cinema, dubbed the Cinecittà.
Still, in the early 2000s the town founded the pop music festival " Fucking Åmål Festival ".
The town of Guernica was founded by Count Tello on April 28, 1366, at the intersection of the road from Bermeo to Durango with the road from Bilbao to Elantxobe and Lekeitio.
In 1663 Deschamps founded a French settlement Leogane on the western coast of the island on the abandoned site of the former Spanish town of Yaguana.
In 1496 the town of Nueva Isabela was founded.
However, as the place did not prove to be defensible, they settled in the remains of an older town upon a hill not far away and founded a new town, which they named Tábor ( after the traditional name of the mountain on which Jesus was expected to return ; see Mark 13 ); hence they were called Taborites.

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