الجمعة، 31 يناير 2020

Arvind Krishna

Arvind Krishna is an Indian American engineer and executive with IBM and was named chief executive officer in January 2020.

Early life and education
Arvind Krishna has a Ph.D. in Electrical & Computer Engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.[1] Before this he attended the Stanes Higher Secondary School, Coonoor,[2] and the Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India (from 1980 to 1985) where he earned his B.E. in Electrical Engineering

Business career
Krishna joined IBM in 1990, rising to become senior vice president for IBM's cloud and cognitive software. He is credited as leading IBM's acquisition of Red Hat for US$34 billion in 2018.

He was appointed to become IBM CEO on April 6, 2020, succeeding Ginni Rometty who had served as CEO since 2012.[3]

He will be the fourth Indian-born head of a prominent US tech group, joining Satya Nadella of Microsoft, Sundar Pichai of Google and Shantanu Narayen of Adobe.[4]

Jawaani Jaaneman

Jawaani Jaaneman is a 2020 Indian Hindi-language comedy film directed by Nitin Kakkar, starring Saif Ali Khan as a 40 year-old father and debutant Alaya Furniturewala as his daughter, alongside Tabu. Principal photography of the film took place from 14 June to 24 August 2019 in London, England. The film was released on 31 January 2020\
Cast
Saif Ali Khan as Jaswinder "Jazz" Singh
Tabu as Ananya
Alaya Furniturewala as Tia
Kubbra Sait as Rhea
Chunky Pandey as Rocky
Kumud Mishra as Dimpy
Rameet Sandhu as Tanvi
Farida Jalal as Jazz's mother
Kiku Sharda as Dr. Kriplani
Dante Alexander as Rohan
Production
Development
Saif Ali Khan started a new production house in October 2018 to co-produce Jawaani Jaaneman with Jay Shewakramani.[3] Saif wanted the avant-garde project in an alternative genre. In a statement, he said, "this is going to be as exciting as it gets. Jay and I have been planning this for a while now and with Jawaani Jaaneman, we found just the right project to produce together.”[4] Alaya Furniturewala daughter of Pooja Bedi, making her debut is playing the role of his daughter.[5][6] Tabu has been cast in an interesting role.[7] Khan lost weight to fit into the character of a forty year old father.[8]

Filming
The filming began in the second week of June 2019 with principal photography in London.[9][10][11] Alaya finished filming first schedule in August 2019. The film was eventually wrapped up on 24 August 2019.[12]

Marketing and Release
The first look poster was released on 24 December 2019[13] and the teaser three days later on the 27 December 2019[14].

On 9 January official trailer of the film was launched by Pooja Entertainment.[15]

The film was released on 31 January 2020

Arrowe Park Hospital

Arrowe Park Hospital is a large, acute hospital, located on a 15-acre (6.1 ha) section of Arrowe Park, close to the village of Upton, Wirral, Merseyside. It is one of three hospitals managed by Wirral University Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust,[1] the others being Clatterbridge Hospital and Wirral Women and Children's Hospital which is also based on the Arrowe Park site.

History
Planning for Arrowe Park Hospital began in the 1960s, although building did not start until the late 1970s.[2] The facility was built to replace Birkenhead General Hospital in Birkenhead, Highfield Maternity Hospital in Wallasey, Leasowe Hospital in Leasowe, St Catherine's Hospital in Birkenhead and Victoria Central Hospital in Wallasey. The hospital was officially opened by the Queen on 4 May 1982.[3]

In March 2011, following remodelling work at a cost of £11.5 million, the maternity and gynaecology unit was renamed Wirral Women and Children's Hospital.[4][5]

In January 2020, the hospital was designated the quarantine site for UK nationals evacuated from China during the 2019–20 Wuhan coronavirus outbreak

دار سك العملة الملكية

دار سك العملة الملكية هي الهيئة المسموح لها بتصنيع أو سك العملات المعدنية في المملكة المتحدة. أُسست منذ أكثر من 1,100 عام، ولكنها منذ عام 2010، أصبحت شركة محدودة متعاقدة مع الخزانة الملكية لتوريد كل العملات المعدنية في المملكة المتحدة، وهي مملوكة بنسبة 100% للخزانة الملكية.

بالإضافة لسكها العملات المعدنية للمملكة المتحدة، فهي أيضًا تسك عملات معدنية للعديد من الدول الأخرى، وتنتج الميداليات العسكرية والتذكارية، لذا فهي تعد أحد أبرز دور سك العملات حول العالم.

بدأت الدار في نقل جزء من عملياتها من تلة البرج بالقرب من برج لندن إلى لانتريسانت، جنوب ويلز عام 1968، إلى أن انتقلت تمامًا عام 1980. بالدار الحالية مجموعة من العملات ترجع للقرن السادس عشر إلى الآن، محفوظة في 8 خزانات أمرت بصنعها إليزابيث الثانية. وتشغل الدار 38 آكر، ويعمل بها 765 موظفًا.

Royal Mint

The Royal Mint is a government-owned mint that produces coins for the United Kingdom. Operating under the name Royal Mint Ltd, the mint is a limited company that is wholly owned by Her Majesty's Treasury and is under an exclusive contract to supply all the nation's coinage. As well as minting circulating coins for use domestically and internationally, the mint also produces planchets, commemorative coins, various types of medals and precious metal bullion.[3] The mint exports to an average of 60 countries a year, making up 70% of its total sales.[4] Formed over 1,100 years ago, the mint was historically part of a series of mints that became centralised to produce coins for the Kingdom of England, all of Great Britain and eventually most of the British Empire. The original London mint from which the Royal Mint is the successor was established in 886 AD and operated within the Tower of London for approximately 800 years before moving to what is now called Royal Mint Court where it remained until the 1960s. As Britain followed the rest of the world in decimalising its currency, the Mint moved from London to a new 38 acres (15 ha) plant in Llantrisant, Glamorgan, Wales, where it has remained since.

In 2009, after recommendations for the mint to be privatised, The Royal Mint ceased being an executive government agency and became a state-owned company wholly owned by HM Treasury. Since then, the mint has expanded its business interests by reviving its bullion trade and developing a £9 million visitor centre
The history of coins in Great Britain can be traced back to the second century BC when they were introduced by Celtic tribes from across the English Channel. The first record of coins being minted in Britain is attributed to Kentish tribes such as the Cantii who around 80–60 B.C. imitated those of Marseille through casting instead of hammering.[5] After the Romans began their invasion of Britain in AD 43, they set up mints across the land, including in London which produced Roman coins for some 40 years before closing. A mint in London reopened briefly in 383 AD until closing swiftly as Roman rule in Britain came to an end. For the next 200 years, no coins appear to have been minted in Britain until the emergence of English kingdoms in 650 AD when as many as 30 mints are recorded across Britain with one being established in London.[6] Control of Britain's mints alternated as different tribes battled over territory. In 886 AD Alfred the Great recaptured London from the Danelaw and began issuing silver pennies bearing his portrait;[7] this is regarded as the start of the continuous history of the Royal Mint.[8]

886 to 1805
In 1279, the country's numerous mints were unified under a single system whereby control was centralised to the mint within the Tower of London, mints outside of London were reduced with only a few local and episcopals continuing to operate.[9] Pipe rolls detailing the financial records of the London mint show an expenditure of £729 17s 8½d and records of timber bought for workshops.

Individual roles at the mint were well established by 1464. The master-worker was charged with hiring engravers and the management of moneyers, while the mint warden was responsible for witnessing the delivery of dies. A specialist mint board was set up in 1472 to enact a 23 February indenture which vested the mint's responsibilities into three main roles; a warden, a master and a comptroller.

In the 16th century having suffering from the effects of the Black Death, mainland Europe was in the middle of an economic expansion, England however was suffering with financial difficulty brought on by excessive government spending. By the 1540s wars with France and Scotland led Henry VIII to enact The Great Debasement which saw the amount of precious metal in coin significantly reduced.[10] In order to further gather control of the country's currency, monasteries were dissolved which effectively ended major coin production outside of London.

In 1603, the union of Scotland and England under King James VI led to a partial union of both countries' currencies, the pound Scots and the pound sterling. Due to Scotland heavily debasing its silver coins, a Scots mark was worth just 13.5d compared to an English mark which was worth 6s 8d. To bridge the difference between the values, unofficial supplementary token coins, often made from lead were made by unauthorised minters across the country. By 1612 there were 3,000 such unlicensed mints producing these tokens, none of whom paying anything towards the crown. The Royal Mint, not wanting to divert manpower away from minting more profitable gold and silver, hired outside agent Lord Harington who under licence started issuing copper farthings in 1613. Private licenses to mint these coins were revoked in 1644 which led traders to resume minting their own supplementary tokens. In 1672 the Royal Mint finally took over the production of copper coinage.

Civil War mints
Prior to the outbreak of the English Civil War, England signed a treaty in 1630 with Spain which ensured a steady supply of silver bullion to the Tower mint. Additional branch mints to aid the one in London were set up including one at Aberystwyth Castle, in Wales. In 1642 parliament seized control of the Tower mint and after Charles I tried to arrest the Five Members he was forced to flee London, establishing at least 16 emergency mints across the British Isles in Colchester, Chester, Cork, Edinburgh, Dublin, Exeter, Salisbury, parts of Cornwall including Truro, Weymouth, Worcester, York, Carlisle, Newark, Pontefract and Scarborough (see also siege money).

After raising the royal standard in Nottingham marking the beginning of the war, Charles called upon loyalist mining engineer Thomas Bushell, the owner of a mint and silver mine in Aberystwyth, to move his operations to the royalist-held Shrewsbury, possibly within in the grounds of Shrewsbury Castle. The mint there was however short-lived, operating for no more than three months before Charles ordered Bushell to relocate the mint to his headquarters in the royal capital of Oxford. The new Oxford mint was established on 15 December 1642 in New Inn Hall at Oxford University, the present site of St. Peter's College. There, silver plates and foreign coins were melted down and in some cases just hammered into shape to produce coins quickly. Bushell was appointed the mint's warden and master-worker, where he laboured alongside notable engravers Nicholas Briot, Thomas Rawlins and Nicholas Burghers, the later of whom being appointed Graver of Seals, Stamps and Medals in 1643. When Prince Rupert took control of Oxford that same year, Bushnell was ordered to move to Bristol Castle where he continued minting coins until it fell to parliamentary control on 11 September 1645, effectively ending Bushnell's involvement in the civil war mints.

In Southern England in November 1642 the king ordered royalist MP Richard Vyvyan to build one or more mints in Cornwall where he was instructed to mint coins from whatever bullion that could be obtained and deliver it to Ralph Hopton, a commander of royalist troops in the region. Vyvyan built a mint in Truro and became its Master until 1646 when it was captured by parliamentarians. In nearby Exeter which had been under control of Westminster since the beginning of the war, a mint was ordered to be set up after parliament debated the proposal on 8 December 1642. After approval was granted, a mint and moneyers were dispatched on 8 December 1642 to the town which was under constant threat of attack by loyalist troops. In September 1643 the town was captured by the Cornish Royalist Army led by Prince Maurice leading to Vyvyan moving his nearby mint in Truro to the now recaptured town. The exact location of the mint in Exeter is unknown, however maps from the time show a street named Old Mint Lane near Friernhay which was to be the site of a 1696 Recoinage mint. Much less is known about the mint's employees with only Richard Vyvyan and clerk Thomas Hawkes recorded
Following Charles I's execution in 1649, the newly formed Commonwealth of England established its own set of coins which for the first time used English rather than Latin and were plainly designed compared to those previously issued under the monarchy.[12] The government invited French engineer Peter Blondeau who worked at the Paris mint to come to London in 1649 in hope of modernising the country's minting process. In France hammer stuck coins had been banned from the Paris Mint since 1639 and replaced with milled coinage.[13] After arriving, it wasn't until 9 May 1651 that his testing began in Drury House, having first required permission from parliament. He initially produced milled silver pattern pieces of half-crowns, shillings and sixpences however rival moneyers favouring hammer stuck coins continued using the old hammering method. In 1656 Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell ordered engraver Thomas Simon to cut a series of dies featuring his bust and for them to be minted using the new milled method. Few of Cromwell's coins entered circulation with Cromwell himself dying in 1658 and the Commonwealth collapsing two year later. Without Cromwell's backing of milled coinage, Peter Blondeau returned to France leaving England to continue minting hammer struck coins.

In 1662, after previous attempts to introduce milled coinage into Britain had failed, the restored monarch Charles II recalled Peter Blondeau to establish a permanent machine-made coinage.[14][15] Despite the introduction of the newer, milled coins, like the old hammered coins they suffered heavily from counterfeiting and clipping. To combat this the text Decus et tutamen (An ornament and a safeguard) was added to some coin rims.[16]

Following the Glorious Revolution of 1688, which saw the ousting of James II from power, parliament took over control of the mint from the Crown which had up until then allowed the mint to act as an independent body producing coins on behalf of the government.

Under the patronage of Charles Montagu, 1st Earl of Halifax, Isaac Newton became the mint's warden in 1696. His role, intended to be a sinecure, was taken seriously by Newton, who went about trying to combat the country's growing problems with counterfeiting. By this time, forgeries accounted for 10% of the country's coinage, clipping was commonplace and the value of silver in coins had surpassed their face value. King William III initiated the Great Recoinage of 1696 whereby all coins were removed from circulation and enacted the Coin Act 1696 making it high treason to own or possess counterfeiting equipment. Satellite mints to aid in the re-coinage were established in Bristol, Chester, Exeter, Norwich, and York, with returned coins being valued by weight, not face value.

The Acts of Union 1707 united England and Scotland into one country, leading London to take over production of Scotland's currency and thus replacing Scotland's Pound Scots with the English Pound Sterling which caused the Edinburgh mint to eventually close on 4 August 1710. As Britain's empire continued to expand, so to was the need to supply its coinage. This along with the need for new mint machinery and cramped conditions within the Tower of London, led to plans for the mint to move to nearby East Smithfield.

1805 to 1967
Tower Hill
Located opposite from the Tower of London on Tower Hill, the new purpose-built mint began construction in 1805 and was completed by 1809. However it was not until 1812 that the move became official, when keys from the old mint were ceremoniously delivered to the Constable of the Tower.[17] Facing the front of the site stood the Johnson Smirke Building whose namesake comes from its designer James Johnson and builder Robert Smirke. This building was flanked on both sides by gatehouses behind which another building housed the mint's new machinery. A number of other smaller buildings were also erected which housed mint officers and staff members. The entire site was protected by a boundary wall which was patrolled by the Royal Mint's military guard.

By 1856, the mint was beginning to prove inefficient, suffering from irregularities in minted coins' fineness and weight. Instructed by Prime Minister Lord Palmerston, the Master of the Mint Thomas Graham was informed that unless the mint could raise its standards and become more economical it would be broken up and placed under management by contractors. Graham sought advice from German chemist August Wilhelm von Hofmann who in turn recommended his student George Frederick Ansell as being able to resolve the mint's issues. In a letter to the treasury dated 29 October 1856, Ansell was put forward as candidate and subsequently was awarded the role of temporary clerk on 12 November 1856 with a £120 a year salary.[18]

Upon taking office, Ansell discovered that the weighing of metals at the mint was extremely loose. At the mint it had been the custom to weigh silver to within 0.5 ounces and gold to a pennyweight (0.05 ounces), however these standards meant losses were being made from overvalued metals. In one such case Ansell delivered 7920.00 ounces of gold to the mint where it was weighed by an official at 7918.15 ounces, a difference of 1.85 ounces. Requesting a second weighing on more accurate scale, the bullion was certified to weigh 7919.98 ounces, far closer to the previous measurement which was off by 960 grains. To increase the accuracy of weights, more precise weighing equipment was ordered and specifications were revised to 0.10 ounce for silver and gold to 0.01oz. Between 1856 and 1866 the old scales were gradually removed and replaced with ones made by Messrs. De Grave, Short, and Fanner; winners of a 1862 International Exhibition prize award for work relating to balances.[18]

Another observation Ansell made was the loss of gold during the manufacturing process. He found that 15-20 ounces could be recovered through the sweep, that is the leftover burnt rubbish from the minting process which was often left in open boxes for many months before being removed. Wanting to account for every particle, he hypothesised that because the Conservation of mass meant it was physically impossible for gold to just disappear he put down the lost weight to a combination of oil, dust and different types of foreign matter amongst the gold.

In 1859, the Royal Mint rejected a batch of gold that was found to be too brittle for the minting of gold sovereigns. Analysis revealed the presence of small amounts of antimony, arsenic and lead. With Ansell's background in chemistry, he persuaded the Royal Mint to allow him to experiment with the alloy and was ultimately able to produce 167,539 gold sovereigns.[19] On a second occasion in 1868, it was again discovered that gold coins, this time totalling £500,000 worth, were being produced with inferior gold. Although the standard practise at the mint was for rejected coins (known as brockages) to be melted down, many entered general circulation and the mint was forced to return thousands of ounces of gold to the Bank of England. Although Ansell offered to re-melt the substandard coins, his offer was rejected causing a row between him and senior mint chiefs which ultimately led to him being removed from his position at the mint
Royal Mint Refinery
After relocating to its new home on Tower Hill, the Mint came under increased scrutiny of how it dealt with unrefined gold that had entered the country. Initially the Master of the Mint was responsible for overseeing the practise since the position's inception in the 1300s, however the refinery process proved too costly and suffered from a lack of accountability from the master. A Royal Commission later set up in 1848 to address these issues gave recommendation for the refinery process to be outsourced to another external agency thereby removing the refining process from the mint's responsibilities. The opportunity to oversee the Mint's refinery was taken up by Anthony de Rothschild, a descendant of the Rothschild family and heir to the multinational investment banking company N M Rothschild & Sons. Rothschild secured a lease from the government in January 1852, purchasing equipment and premises adjacent to the Royal Mint on 19 Royal Mint Street under the name of Royal Mint Refinery.

Colonial Expansion
As Britain's influence as a world power expanded, with colonies being established abroad, a greater need for currency led to the Royal Mint opening satellite branches of itself overseas. In Australia, the local Legislative Council petitioned the UK government to establish a branch of the Royal Mint in Sydney (Sydney Mint) after prospector Edward Hargraves discovered gold in Ophir, New South Wales in 1851. The petitioned gain royal assent in 1853 and plans were made by the Deputy Master of the Royal Mint in London to open the Royal Mint's first overseas branch within the colony. The Royal Mint's Superintendent of Coining travelled to Australia to oversee its establishment on Macquarie Street within the southern wing of Sydney Hospital where it opened in 1854. Its success led to the opening of Melbourne Mint on 2 June 1872 which cost £368,350 and Perth Mint which opened on 20 June 1899. In 1926 after operating for 72 years, the Sydney Mint closed due to its inferior technology and capabilities being superseded by those in Melbourne and Perth. After Australia was federalised in 1901, Great Britain continued to own the mints to as late as 1 July 1970, when they became statutory authorities of the Government of Western Australia.

In Canada, which had been under British rule since 1763, British coins circulated alongside those of other nations until 1858 when London started producing coins for the newly established Canadian dollar. As Canada developed, in 1890 calls were made for a mint to be built in Ottawa to facilitate the country's gold mines. The new mint opened on 2 January 1908 by Lord Grey producing coins for circulation including Ottawa Mint sovereigns. In 1931 under the Statute of Westminster, the mint came under the control on the Government of Canada and subsequently renamed the Royal Canadian Mint
A fifth branch of the Royal Mint was established in Mumbai (Bombay), India on 21 December 1917 as part of a wartime effort. It struck sovereign from 15 Aug 1918 til 22 Apr 1919. before closing in May 1919.[22][23] A sixth and final overseas mint was established in the Union of South Africa in Pretoria on 1 January 1923, producing £83,114,575 worth of sovereigns of its lifetime. As South Africa began cutting ties with Britain, the mint closed on 30 June 1941 only to be later reopened as the South African Mint.[24]

Although just six mints were officially controlled by London's Royal Mint, many more independent mints were set up to facilitate parts of the British Empire. In New Westminster, British Columbia the British Columbia gold rushes led to a mint being set up in 1862 under Governor James Douglas where it produced a few gold and silver coins before being shut down in 1862 to aid the city of Victoria in becoming the regions provincial capital.[25] On 26 February 1864 an Order of Council requested for the founding of independent mint (Hong Kong Mint) in British Hong Kong to issue silver and bronze coins.[26][27] This mint was short lived however due to its coins being heavy debasement causing significant losses. The site was sold to Jardine Matheson in 1868 and the mint machinery sold to the Japanese Mint in Osaka.[28]

New Zealand's $1 and $2 coins are minted by the Royal Mint in the United Kingdom. The 10 cent, 20 cent and 50 cent coins are minted by the Royal Canadian Mint. Other mints the Bank has used over time include: the Royal Australian Mint, Norwegian Mint and the South African Mint Company. The F4 Coin mintings data has details about the number and value of coin mintages.[29]

1914 to 1967
In 1914 as war broke out in Europe, Chancellor of the Exchequer David Lloyd George instructed for gold coins to be removed from circulation so as to help pay for the war effort. The government started to issue £1 and 10 shilling treasury notes as replacement paving the way for Britain leaving the gold standard in 1931.
From 1928, the Irish Free State (later Republic of Ireland) issued its own coins. These were produced by the Royal Mint until Ireland established its own Currency Centre in Dublin in 1978.

During World War II the Mint played an important role in ensuring that people were paid for their services with hard currency rather than banknotes. Under Operation Bernhard, the Nazis planned to collapse the British economy by flooding the country with forged notes leading the Bank of England to stop issuing banknotes of £10 and above. To meet these demands the Mint doubled its output so that by 1943 it was minting around 700 million coins a year despite being under constant threat of being bombed. The Deputy Master of the Mint John Craig recognised the dangers to the Mint, introduced a number of measures to ensure the Mint could continue to operate in the event of a disaster. Craig added emergency water supplies, reinforced the Mint's basement to act as an air-raid shelter and even accepted employment of women for the first time. For most of the war the mint managed to escape the destruction of the Blitz until December 1940 when three members of staff were killed in an air-raid. Around the same time an auxiliary mint was set up at Pinewood Studios which had been requisitioned for the war effort. Staff and machinery from Tower Hill were moved to the site in Buckinghamshire where it started production in June 1941 and operated for the duration of the war.[30][31] Over the course of the war the Royal Mint was hit on several different occasions and at one point was put out of commission for three weeks. As technology changed with the introduction of electricity and demand continuing to grow, the process of rebuilding continued so that by the 1960s little of the original mint remained, apart from Smirke's 1809 building and its gatehouses at the front.

1966 to present
Relocation to Wales
On 1 March 1966 the government announced plans to decimalise the nation's currency,[32] thereby requiring a large-scale withdrawal and re-minting of millions of new coins. At its current site on Tower Hill the mint had suffered from lack of space for many years prior, proving to be inadequate to meet the anticipated high demand a recoinage would entailed.[33] The subject of the mint's move to a more suitable site had been discussed as far back as 1870 when Deputy Master of the Mint Charles Fremantle recommended it in his first annual report. At the time it was suggested that the current land at Tower Hill which was quite valuable could be sold to finance the purchase of land in nearby Whitefriars, London and pay for a new mint building.[34] However after many years of subsequent debate by parliament it was decided that improvements could be made to the existing site at Tower Hill. With Decimal Day set for 1971 the government quickly went about deciding on where to establish the new mint.

Over twenty sites were considered including suggestions for Ulster and Scotland,[35] however the small Welsh town of Llantrisant located ten miles (16 km) northwest of Cardiff was eventually chosen.[36] Work on the new mint began in August 1967 with the construction of a blank treatment plant and plant for striking. This first phase of the mint was officially opened on 17 December 1968 by the royal attendance of Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Philip and their son Prince Charles. Originally there were fears that the Royal family would face protests because of the Investiture of Prince Charles as the Prince of Wales however such protests failed to materialise.[37] The second phase of construction began in 1973 and included the addition of a means to mint coins from raw metals completing the full minting process. Upon completion the final cost for the land, buildings and plant came to £8 million.[38] Coin minting gradually shifted to the new site over the next seven years until the last coin, a gold sovereign, was struck in London in November 1975.

Financial Difficulties
After moving to Wales, the mint struggled to become profitable as the Western world fell into a deep recession during the early 1970s. To combat a rising national debt, the mint was established as a trading fund on 1 April 1975 which required it to become self-financing. This measure proved successful and the mint started to become more profitable through heavy exports. In April 1990 the mint became an Executive Agency[39] however by 2001 the mint had reported its first annual loss; a result attributed to only securing 5% of new Euro coin production rather than the projected 20%. Despite this the mint went begun diversifying their product range through expanding to offer items outside their usual coin-related merchandise. Around this time the mint was selling different types of jewelry, commemorative plates and figurines,[40] eventually creating its own Royal Mint Classics range of collectible goods. This part of the business proved popular in attracting new customers however suffered from poor product development. Example of its products included a hip flask with an embedded £2 coin, an Edinburgh Crystal clock combined with a millennium Crown, and a Wedgwood plate featuring Britannia.[41] In 2007 the Mint decided to resume its focus on coins, downsizing non-coin related business and discontinuing its Classics range.[42]

A second financial blow came in the form of the 2008 global financial crisis when a rescue package costing £500 billion was announced to help stabilise Britain's banking system. This led to fear that the government would attempt to finance the cost by selling off state-owned organisations. In a 2009 pre-budget report the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Alistair Darling stated that the treasury would "explore the potential benefits of alternative future models for the Royal Mint".[43][44] A month later in his 2009 United Kingdom budget he recommended that the mint be made a company with a view of it being sold.[45]

The decision was met with outrage by unions and opposition parties in parliament who called it the "selling off the family silver" and that it would result in jobs losses. In contrast, the chief executive of the mint Andrew Stafford welcomed the decision stating that it would lead to further growth and secure the future of the business.[46] On 31 December 2009, rather than being fully privatised, the mint ceased to be an executive agency and its assets vested in a limited company, Royal Mint Ltd. The owner of the new company became The Royal Mint trading fund, which itself continued to be owned by HM Treasury. As its sole shareholder the mint pays an annual dividend of £4 million to treasury with the remaining profits being reinvested into the mint.[47] In 2015 Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne announced a £20 billion privatisation drive to raise funds with the Royal Mint being up for sale alongside other institutions including the Met Office and Companies House.

Transfer deadline day

A transfer window is the period during the year in which a football club can transfer players from other playing staff into their playing staff. Such a transfer is completed by registering the player into the new club through FIFA. "Transfer window" is the unofficial term commonly used by the media for the concept of "registration period" as described in the FIFA Regulations on the Status and Transfer of Player.[1] According to the rules, each national football association decides on the time (such as the dates) of the 'window' but it may not exceed 12 weeks. The second registration period occurs during the season and may not exceed four weeks.

The transfer window of a given football association governs only international transfers into that football association. International transfers out of an association are always possible to those associations that have an open window. The transfer window of the association that the player is leaving does not have to be open.

The window was introduced in response to negotiations with the European Commission. The system has been used in many European leagues before being brought into compulsory effect by FIFA during the 2002–03 season.[2] English football was initially behind the plans when they were proposed in the early 1990s, in the hope that it would improve teams' stability and prevent agents from searching for deals all year around, but by the time it was eventually introduced they had to be persuaded that it would work.[3] However, the exact regulations and possible exceptions are established by each competition's governing body rather than by the national football association
Current schedules and exceptions
FIFA regulates in general that there shall be two windows, a longer one (max. twelve weeks) in the break between seasons and a shorter one (max. one month) in the middle of a season. The specific periods depend on the league's season cycle and are determined by the national football authorities.[5]

Most major European leagues commence in the second half of the year (e.g. August or September) and stretch over two calendar years to the first half of the next year (e.g. May), resulting in a close season window in the Summer ending in August, and a mid-season window in January.

The periods are different when a league runs throughout a single calendar year, as in most Nordic countries due to weather constraints, Major League Soccer due to both weather and competition from other locally popular sports (notably basketball and American football), or as the traditional season in the Southern Hemisphere. The first window generally opens from 1 March until midnight of 30 April, followed by the in-season window from 1 to 31 August.
Premier League clubs in England voted to end the summer window on the Thursday before the start of the season - on August 9 in 2018, instead of August 31. Because FIFA demands the window must be open for 12 weeks, the window will open around May 17, shortly after the final games of the season on May 13. Clubs will be able to sell players until August 31 but not buy replacements after the deadline of August 9.

Although, in England, transfers between clubs in the same league can take place as soon as the last competitive fixtures for the season have been played, many transfers will not be completed until 1 July because many players' contracts expire on 30 June. International transfers into the English leagues (including the Premier League) cannot be made until the window has opened on 17 May. Outside the transfer window, a club may still sign players on an emergency basis, usually if they have no goalkeeper available. Special dispensation from their competition's governing body, for example the Premier League, is required. The transfer window restriction does not apply to clubs in or below the National League division.[18][29]

If the last day of a transfer window is on a weekend, the deadline can be extended to the following Monday at the request of those involved for business reasons.[30] The first shift of the deadline since its inception took place in summer 2008, when the deadline was extended by 24 hours to fall on Monday 1 September at midnight.[31][32] The transfer deadline in England was similarly extended to 5 pm 1 September 2009, due to the August Bank Holiday. The German football league announced an extension of the January 2009 deadline to 2 February.[33]

Free agents can be signed by a club at any time during the season, if they had been released by their previous club before the end of the transfer window.[30] A club can request to sign a player on emergency basis, e.g. if several goalkeepers are injured at the same time.[30] Outside the transfer window in England, once seven days have passed following the end of a transfer window, clubs from the English Football League (Regulation 53.3.4)[34] and (provided the player is not registered with a club from any league below the National League division) National League division[35] (Rule 6.6.4) can loan in players i) in the first half of the season, until 5.00pm on the fourth Thursday in November and ii) in the second half of the season, until 5.00pm on the fourth Thursday in March. An existing loan deal can be made permanent at any time outside the transfer window.[36]

The day upon which a window closes is known as transfer deadline day, and is usually one of the busiest days of the window, generating a flurry of transfers, often because a number of interdependent transfers are completed resembling a housing chain, generating much media interest.

Calls to end the transfer window
Steve Coppell, former manager of Reading in England's Premier League, and others have called for the transfer window to be scrapped in favour of the previous system, where deals could be struck throughout the season until the closing weeks.[37] Coppell said that the transfer window breeds panic and encourages "scurrilous" transfer activity adding that "I cannot see the logic in a transfer window. It brings on a fire-sale mentality, causes unrest via the media and means clubs buy too many players" adding that "The old system, where if you had a problem you could look at loans or make a short-term purchase, was far better than this system we have at the moment".[38] Former England Manager Sven-Göran Eriksson has also questioned the value of the transfer window, commenting: "You do wonder at times if it is right to have a window, it was easier when it was open all the time and perhaps fairer for the players. I am sure much of the business being done on the last day is a little bit desperate and that is not right. I think it was better before, but then I am old".[39]

In January 2013 Arsenal manager Arsène Wenger asked for the January transfer window to be limited to two transfers per window and claimed it is "unfair" in its current form. He cited Newcastle United transfer activity as an example.[40] The following year, Wenger hit out at Manchester United's £37m purchase of Juan Mata from rivals Chelsea. Wenger argued that the transfer was unfair because United and Chelsea had already played each other twice during the season, but United would still have to play Arsenal, and said that "the rules should be adapted more for fairness".[41] Manchester City manager Manuel Pellegrini backed the sentiment of Wenger, disagreeing that a player "can go from one team to another team in the same league at this part of the year" and also said that the winter transfer window was unbalanced in favour of big clubs, saying "a club with money can take the best players from the other teams".[42][43]

Former Crystal Palace manager Alan Pardew questioned why the Premier League transfer window remains open after the start of the season after Arsenal made a bid for midfielder Yohan Cabaye during his time as Newcastle United manager in August 2013.[44]

In January 2015, FIFPro said that the current transfer window system is "failing football and its players", one of the main issues being that players are released from clubs without explanation or compensation.[

ويليان جوزيه

ويليان جوزيه دا سيلفا (بالبرتغالية: Willian José)؛ مواليد 23 نوفمبر 1991 في البرازيل) المعروف باسم ويليان جوزيه، هو لاعب كرة قدم برازيلي يلعب مع ريال سوسيداد كمهاجم. مثّل منتخب البرازيل تحت 20 سنة لكرة القدم. بدأ ويليان جوزيه مسيرته الرياضية عام 2009.

المسيرة الاحترافية
أندية لعب لها
ريال سوسيداد

Willian Jose

Willian José da Silva (born 23 November 1991), better known as Willian José, is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a striker for Spanish club Real Sociedad.
lub career
Grêmio Barueri
Born in Porto Calvo, Alagoas, Willian José started his career at local CRB's youth setup, before joining Grêmio Barueri in 2008, aged 17. On 1 August 2009 he made his first team – and Série A – debut, coming on as a late substitute in a 1–2 loss at Botafogo.[1]

Willian José scored his first goal as a professional on 17 January of the following year, netting his side's only in a 1–1 draw at Sertãozinho for the Campeonato Paulista championship.[2] He scored six further times during the campaign, which ended in relegation.

São Paulo
On 13 January 2011 Willian José joined São Paulo FC.[3] He was mostly used as a backup to Luís Fabiano and Dagoberto in his first year, and despite the latter leaving for Internacional in 2012, he was still third-choice behind new signing Osvaldo.

Grêmio / Santos
On 13 December 2012 Willian José moved to Grêmio,[4] but after appearing rarely he signed with Santos FC in May of the following year.[5] He appeared in 28 matches during his only season at Peixe, scoring five goals.

Real Madrid
On 8 January 2014 Willian José moved abroad, signing a six-month deal with Real Madrid, being assigned to the reserves in Segunda División.[6] After scoring a hat-trick in a 3–2 win at Recreativo de Huelva,[7] he was called up for the main squad and was on the bench for the matches against Real Sociedad and UD Almería.

Willian José made his La Liga debut on 11 May, replacing compatriot Casemiro in a 0–2 loss at Celta de Vigo.[8] In June, however, he was released.

Zaragoza
Willian José signed a one-year deal with Real Zaragoza in the second level on 29 August 2014.[9] He made his debut for the club on 7 September, replacing David Muñoz in a 1–4 heavy loss at FC Barcelona B.

Willian José scored his first goal for the club on 12 October 2014, in a 3–3 away draw against CD Lugo. He also scored braces against UD Las Palmas (3–5 away defeat) and Girona FC (4–1 away win), finishing the campaign with ten goals as his side missed out promotion in the play-offs.

Las Palmas
On 30 July 2015, Willian José signed a one-year contract with Las Palmas, newly promoted to the top tier.[10] His first goal in the category occurred on 12 December, the game's only in a home success against Real Betis.

On 25 January 2016, Willian José scored a brace in a 2–3 loss at Levante UD. On 20 February, he scored a first-half equalizer against league leaders FC Barcelona, but the hosts would eventually lose by 1–2. He also scored the equalizer against former club Real Madrid on 13 March, but the hosts again lost by 1–2.

Real Sociedad
On 31 July 2016, Willian José signed a five-year deal with fellow league team Real Sociedad.[11] On 21 September, he scored a double in a 4–1 home routing of former club Las Palmas.

International career
In 2011, Willian José was a member of both the FIFA U-20 World Cup and South American Youth Championship winning squads with Brazil, scoring twice in the former and thrice in the latter.

On 12 March 2018, he received his first call-up for the senior team for two friendly matches against Russia and Germany

Wirral

Wirral (/ˈwɪrəl/), also known as The Wirral, is a peninsula in North West England. The roughly rectangular peninsula is about 15 miles (24 km) long and 7 miles (11 km) wide and is bounded by the River Dee to the west that forms a boundary with Wales, the River Mersey to the east, and the Irish Sea to the north.

Historically, Wirral was wholly within Cheshire; in the Domesday Book, its border with the rest of the county was placed at "two arrow falls from Chester city walls." However, since the passing of the Local Government Act 1972, only the southern third has been in Cheshire, with the rest in the Metropolitan Borough of Wirral in the modern county of Merseyside, which is part of the Liverpool City Region.

The main urban development is on the eastern side of the peninsula. Wirral contains both affluent and deprived areas, with affluent areas largely in the west, south and north of the peninsula, and deprived areas concentrated in the east, especially within Birkenhead.
Origin of the name
The name Wirral literally means "myrtle corner", from the Old English wir, a myrtle tree, and heal, an angle, corner or slope. It is supposed that the land was once overgrown with bog myrtle, a plant no longer found in the area, but plentiful around Formby, to which Wirral would once have had a similar habitat.[1] The name was given to the Hundred of Wirral (or Wilaveston) around the 8th century.[2]

History
Prehistoric settlement
The earliest evidence of human occupation of Wirral dates from the Mesolithic period, around 7000 BC. Excavations at Greasby have uncovered flint tools, signs of stake holes and a hearth used by a hunter-gatherer community. Other evidence from about the same period has been found at Irby, Hoylake and New Brighton. Later Neolithic stone axes and pottery have been found in Oxton, Neston, and Meols. At Meols and New Brighton there is evidence of continuing occupation through to the Bronze Age, around 1000 BC, and funerary urns of the period have been found at West Kirby and Hilbre.[3]

Before the time of the Romans, Wirral was inhabited by a Celtic tribe, the Cornovii. Artefacts discovered in Meols suggest it was an important port from at least 500 BC. Traders came from Gaul and the Mediterranean localities to seek minerals from North Wales and Cheshire.[4] There are remains of a small Iron Age fort at Burton, for which the town was named (burh tún being Old English for "fort town").[3]

The Romans and Britons
Around 70 AD, the Romans founded Chester. Evidence of their occupation on Wirral has been found, including the remains of a road near Mollington, Ledsham and Willaston. This road may have continued to the port at Meols, which may have been used as a base for attacking the north Wales coast. Storeton Quarry may also have been used by Romans for materials for sculpture. Remains of possible Roman roads have also been found at Greasby and at Bidston. By the end of the Roman period, pirates were a menace to traders in the Irish Sea, and soldiers may have been garrisoned at Meols to combat this threat.[4]

Although Roman rule ended with the departure of the last Roman troops in 410, later coins and other material found at Meols show that it continued to operate as a trading port. Evidence of Celtic Christianity from the 5th or 6th centuries is shown in the originally circular shape of churchyards at Bromborough, Woodchurch and elsewhere, and also in the dedication of the parish church at Wallasey to a 4th-century bishop, Hilary of Poitiers. The Celtic names of Liscard and Landican (from llan-T/Decwyn) both suggest an ancient British origin. The name of Wallasey, meaning "Welsh (or foreigners') island", is evidence of British settlement.[3] The Welsh name, both ancient and modern, for Wirral is Cilgwri.[5] In Welsh mythology, the ouzel (or blackbird) of Cilgwri was one of the most ancient creatures in the world.[6]

English and Norse
The Anglo-Saxons under Æthelfrith, king of Northumbria, laid waste to Chester around 616. Æthelfrith withdrew, leaving the area west and south of the Mersey to become part of Mercia, and Anglo-Saxon settlers took over Wirral except the northern tip. Many of Wirral's villages, such as Willaston, Eastham and Sutton, were established and named at this time.

Towards the end of the 9th century, Vikings began raiding the area. They settled along the Dee side of the peninsula, and along the sea coast, giving their villages names such as Kirby, Greasby and Meols. They introduced their own local government system with a parliament at Thingwall. The pseudo-historical Fragmentary Annals of Ireland appears to record the Hiberno-Scandinavian settlement of the Wirral peninsula in its account of the immigration of Ingimundr near Chester. This Irish source places this settlement in the aftermath of the Vikings' expulsion from Dublin in 902, and an unsuccessful attempt to settle on Anglesey soon afterwards. Following these setbacks, Ingimundr is stated to have settled near Chester with the consent of Æthelflæd, co-ruler of Mercia.[7] The boundary of the Viking colony is believed to have passed south of Neston and Raby, and along Dibbinsdale.[3] Evidence of Norse speech in Wirral can still be seen from place name evidence – such as the common -by (meaning "village" in Scandinavian languages) – suffixes and names such as Tranmere, which comes from trani melr ("cranebird sandbank"). Viking Age sculpture corroborates this.[8] Recent Y-DNA research has also revealed the genetic trail left by Scandinavians in Wirral, specifically relatively high rates of the haplogroup R1a, associated in Britain with Scandinavian ancestry.[9]

Bromborough in Wirral is also one of the possible sites of an epic battle in 937, the Battle of Brunanburh, which confirmed England as an Anglo-Saxon kingdom. This is the first battle where England united to fight the combined forces of the Norsemen and the Scots, and thus historians consider it the birthplace of England. The battle site covered a large area of Wirral. Egil's Saga, a story which tells of the battle, may have referred to Wirral as Wen Heath, Vínheíþr in Icelandic.[8][10]

The Normans and the early Middle Ages
After invading England in 1066 and subduing Northumbria in 1069/70, William the Conqueror invaded and ravaged Chester and its surrounding area, laying waste to much of Wirral. The Domesday survey of 1086 shows that Wirral then was more densely populated than most of England, and the manor of Eastham, which covered most of the east of the peninsula from Bidston to the River Gowy, was the second largest in Cheshire. Of the 28 former lords of the Wirral manors listed, 12 bore Norse names. By 1086, most of the area was in the hands of Norman lords such as Robert of Rhuddlan, his cousin Hugh d'Avranches, and Hamo de Mascy. The survey shows 405 family heads living in the peninsula, suggesting a total population of 2,000–3,000.[3][11]

The Earls of Chester ruled the whole of the County Palatine, including Wirral, almost as "a kingdom within a kingdom" for about 250 years. Between 1120–1123, Earl Ranulph le Meschin converted Wirral into a hunting forest, an area in which game, particularly deer and boar, could be allowed to flourish undisturbed. A chief forester was appointed with a ceremonial horn, and the position soon became a hereditary responsibility of the Stanley family. However, after complaints from the residents about the wildness of the area and oppression by the Stanleys, Edward the Black Prince as Earl of Chester agreed to a charter confirming the disafforestation of Wirral, shortly before his death from amoebic dysentery.[12] The proclamation was issued by his father Edward III on 20 July 1376.[3][13]

At the end of the 12th century, Birkenhead Priory stood on the west bank of the Mersey at a headland of birch trees, from which the town derives its name. The ruined priory is Merseyside's oldest surviving building and its Benedictine monks provided the first official Mersey ferry service around 1330, having been granted a passage to Liverpool by a charter from Edward III.[14] At this time, large areas of Wirral were owned by Chester Abbey. In 1278 the Abbey was granted the right to hold an annual three-day fair at Bromborough, but the fair declined after the Black Death in 1349. Another fair was established in 1299 at Burton. Meanwhile, Meols continued as an important port, and the eroded coastline there has provided what is described as "the largest collection of medieval domestic items to have come from any single site outside London".[3][15]

The 16th, 17th and 18th centuries
A Subsidy Roll of 1545 shows that the population of Wirral was no more than 4,000. The peninsula was divided into 15 parishes (Wallasey, Bidston, Upton, Woodchurch, West Kirby, Thurstaston, Heswall, Bebington, Bromborough, Eastham, Neston, Burton, Shotwick, Backford and Stoke). Most parishes were subdivided into smaller townships, of which the largest in terms of population were Neston, Burton, Wallasey, Tranmere (then within the parish of Bebington) and Liscard, and were the same size as small rural villages.[3]
Wirral's proximity to the port of Chester influenced the history of the Dee side of the peninsula. From about the 14th century, Chester provided facilities for trade with Ireland, Spain, and Germany, and seagoing vessels would "lay to" in the Dee awaiting favourable winds and tides. As the Dee started to silt up, harbouring facilities developed at Shotwick, Burton, Neston, Parkgate, Dawpool, and "Hoyle Lake" or Hoylake. However, there was not a gradual progression of development, and downstream anchorages such as that at Hoyle Lake (which replaced Meols) were in occasional use from medieval times, depending on the weather and state of the tide. The main port facilities were at Neston and Parkgate.[3]

At the same time, larger ships and economic growth in Lancashire stimulated the growth of Liverpool. The first wet dock in Britain was opened in Liverpool in 1715, and the town's population grew from some 6,000 to 80,000 during the 18th century. The need to develop and protect the port led to a chain of lighthouses being built along the north Wirral coast. The commercial expansion of Liverpool, and the increase in stage coach traffic from Chester, also spurred the growth of ferries across the River Mersey. By the end of the 18th century the Wirral side of the Mersey had five ferry houses, at Seacombe, Woodside, the Rock, New Ferry and Eastham.[16]

Other communications were also improving. Turnpike roads linking Chester with Eastham, Woodside, and Neston were built after 1787. In 1793, work began on the Ellesmere Canal, connecting the Mersey with Chester and Shropshire through the fluvioglacial landform known as the Backford gap, and the town of Ellesmere Port began to develop.

The excavation of the New Cut of the Dee, opened in 1737, to improve access to Chester, diverted the river's course to the Welsh side of the estuary and took trade away from the Wirral coastline.[17] Although plans were made to overcome its gradual silting up, including one in 1857 to cut a ship canal from a point between Thurstaston and Heswall to run along the length of Wirral to Chester, this and other schemes came to nothing, and the focus of general trade moved irrevocably to the much deeper Mersey. However, from the late 18th century there was coal mining near Neston, in tunnels stretching up to two miles under the Dee, and a quay at Denhall was used for coal exports.[3]

The 19th century
The first steam ferry service across the Mersey started in 1817, and steam-powered ships soon opened up the Wirral's Mersey coast for industrialisation. The 1820s saw the birth of the area's renowned shipbuilding tradition when William Laird opened his shipyard in Birkenhead, later expanded by his son John Laird. The Lairds were largely responsible for the early growth of Birkenhead, commissioning the architect James Gillespie Graham to lay it out as a new town modelled on Edinburgh. In 1847, Birkenhead's first docks and its municipal park, the first in Britain and the inspiration for New York's Central Park, were opened, and the town expanded rapidly. Birkenhead's population of less than one thousand in 1801 rose to over 33,000 by 1851, and to 157,000 by 1901. The town became a borough in 1877, incorporating within it Oxton and Tranmere.

The improved communications also allowed Liverpool merchants to buy up and develop large estates in Wirral. James Atherton and William Rowson developed the resort of New Brighton, and new estates for the gentry were also built at Egremont, Oxton, Claughton and Rock Ferry. Arrowe Hall was built for the Shaw family in 1835.[3]

In the mid-19th century docks were established at Birkenhead and in the Wallasey Pool, and continuing development for a wide range of industry both there and along the banks of the Mersey. The New Chester Road was opened in 1833. Wirral's first railway was built in 1840, planned by George Stephenson and connecting Birkenhead with Chester. In 1852 Price's Patent Candle Company built a factory and model village at Bromborough. This was followed in 1888 by William Lever's establishment of the much larger Sunlight soap factory and Port Sunlight garden village, designed to house its employees and provide them with a benign environment. The opening of the Manchester Ship Canal in 1894, with its outfall at Eastham, led to further port-side and industrial development beside the Mersey at Ellesmere Port.

In 1886, the Mersey Railway tunnel was opened, linking Wirral and Liverpool. This led to the further rapid growth of suburbs in Wirral, particularly in Wallasey, Hoylake and West Kirby, and later Bebington and Heswall. Wallasey's population grew to over 53,000 by 1901, and the town also achieved borough status soon after the turn of the century.[3]

The 20th century
The dockland areas of Wallasey and Birkenhead continued to develop and prosper in the first half of the century, specialising in trade with Africa and the Far East. A host of other port-related industries then came into existence, such as flour milling, tanning, edible oil refining and the manufacture of paint and rubber-based products. In 1922 a new oil dock was built at Stanlow near Ellesmere Port, and in 1934 oil refining began there. A large chemical and oil refining complex still dominates the area.

In 1929, the 3rd World Scout Jamboree was held at Arrowe Park and this celebrated the 21st Anniversary of the publication of Scouting for Boys. Thirty-five countries were represented by 30,000 Scouts, plus another 10,000 British Scouts who took the opportunity to camp in the vicinity.

The rail tunnel under the Mersey was supplemented by a vehicle tunnel in 1934, the Queensway Tunnel. A third tunnel opened in 1971, the Kingsway Tunnel, connecting with the M53 motorway which now runs up the centre of the peninsula. These new roads contributed to the massive growth of commuting by car between Liverpool and Wirral, and the development of new suburban estates around such villages as Moreton, Upton, Greasby, Pensby, and Bromborough.

In 1940–41, as part of the Blitz, parts of Wirral, especially around the docks, suffered extensive bomb damage. There were 464 people killed in Birkenhead and 355 in Wallasey, and 80% of all houses in Birkenhead were either destroyed or badly damaged.[3] During the Second World War, Wirral held two RAF sites, RAF West Kirby (which was a camp, not an airfield) and RAF Hooton Park and a number of anti-aircraft sites to protect the docks of Birkenhead and Liverpool.

After the Second World War, economic decline began to set in Birkenhead, as elsewhere in the area which had started to become known as Merseyside. However, there continued to be industrial development along the Mersey between Birkenhead and Ellesmere Port, including the large Vauxhall Motors car factory on the site of RAF Hooton Park.[3]

Geography
Wirral can be defined both as a geographical peninsula and as a socio-cultural area. The current Metropolitan Borough of Wirral has a population of 312,293 (according to the 2001 census),[18] and covers an area of 60.35 square miles, bounded by the Cheshire Plain, the Dee and the Mersey. The Irish Sea lies to its north west side.[14]

Physical geography
Although it has been stated that "it is difficult to find any work in which there is a written description of the exact area defining the Wirral Peninsula",[19] historian Stephen Roberts defines it as "the peninsula which is bounded by the Dee and Mersey estuaries, Irish Sea and... the route of the Shropshire Union Canal between Ellesmere Port and Chester". This definition extends the original hundred slightly further east, to the River Gowy.[3]

The Shropshire Union Canal joins the Mersey at Ellesmere Port and the Dee at Chester. This canal technically makes the peninsula an island. In the north of the peninsula, the River Fender, Arrowe Brook and Greasby Brook drain into the River Birket, which itself flows into the River Mersey via Wallasey Pool (Birkenhead Docks). Further south, the River Clatter and River Dibbin drain into the Mersey at Bromborough Pool.[11]

Two approximately parallel Triassic sandstone ridges run down the length of the peninsula. The western ridge is made up of Grange and Caldy Hills at 256 feet in height, then Thurstaston Hill (298 ft), Poll Hill in Heswall (350 ft, the highest point in Wirral) and Burton (222 ft). The less continuous eastern ridge consists of Bidston Hill (231 ft), Prenton (259 ft) and Storeton Hill (229 ft).[11] The shallow Fender Valley, between these ridges, was carved out by a large glacier.

Human geography
The major urban centres of Wirral are to its east: these include Birkenhead and Wallasey. To the west and south, Wirral is more rural. Two-thirds of the population of Wirral live on one third of the land in Birkenhead and Wallasey, according to Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council. Other towns to the south and west of this area are usually considered part of Wirral: notably, Ellesmere Port is often described as one of its "border towns".[19] For regional economic planning, the Metropolitan Borough of Wirral is considered part of the Liverpool City Region.[20]

Settlements
There are many towns and villages on Wirral. Those administered by the Metropolitan Borough of Wirral are listed in List of towns and villages in Wirral (borough). Those also on Wirral but administered by Cheshire West and Chester include:

Burton
Capenhurst
Ellesmere Port
Great Sutton
Hooton
Little Sutton
Ness
Neston
Overpool
Parkgate
Puddington
Shotwick
Willaston
Little Neston
M53 Divide
The M53 is also seen as an East-West divide between the affluent and developing areas of the Wirral.[21][22]

Landmarks
Despite containing urban and industrial areas, Wirral still has picturesque villages, sandy beaches, large areas of land owned by the National Trust as well as views across the two estuaries and out into the Irish Sea.[23] Among the areas of open land are Bidston Hill, Caldy Hill, Eastham Country Park, including the Victorian Pleasure Gardens, Hilbre Island, North Wirral Coastal Park, Thurstaston Common and Thor's Stone and the Wirral Way. Ness Botanical Gardens are part of the University of Liverpool and have won many awards.[24] The visitor centre at RSPB Burton Mere Wetlands provides birdwatching facilities in the Dee Estuary nature reserve.[25]

Places of architectural interest include Hamilton Square, Rock Park and Port Sunlight. The view of the buildings on Liverpool's Pier Head when crossing on the Mersey Ferry is famous. Many villages of the Wirral such as Burton are also well preserved with their characteristic red sandstone buildings and walls. The old port of Parkgate also attracts many visitors. The arts are well represented by the Lady Lever Art Gallery at Port Sunlight and the Williamson Art Gallery in Birkenhead. The historical sites include Birkenhead Priory, Leasowe Lighthouse, Hadlow Road railway station and the buildings and ancient carvings on Bidston Hill.

Accents and dialects
For reasons that are both social and geographical, accents on the east side of Wirral tend to show a stronger Merseyside influence than those on the west side.[26] Neston once had a distinctive dialect derived from the migrant workers at the Denhall Colliery.[27]

Wirral in literature
Sir Gawain spent Christmas in Wirral before his confrontation with the Green Knight.
The wilderness of Wirral:
few lived there
Who loved with a good heart
either God or man
Olaf Stapledon, a writer, spent much of his life in West Kirby and Caldy, and many landscapes mentioned in his works can be identified.
Jim Bennett, although born in Liverpool has lived for many years in Wirral and in Heswall. Many landmarks, places and shops are used in his writing. His collection of poems Larkhill was nominated for the Ted Hughes Poetry Award.
Wirral is described in Helen Forrester's book Twopence to Cross the Mersey (1974) as a place unreachable and comparably rich from the perspective of a poor girl struggling to live with her family in Liverpool during the Great Depression, despite having an aunt in West Kirby and the Mersey ferry costing just two old pence.
Maria V. Snyder named the maximum security prison in her book Spy Glass after Wirral, after she was awarded the "Wirral paperback of the year" by school pupils for her earlier book Poison Study.
Wirral is the setting of the novel Awaydays by Kevin Samson, published by Cape in March 1998 and filmed in 2009. Set in 1979, the story follows a music-loving young man who hides his middle-class background when he joins a group of hooligans who follow Tranmere Rovers.[28]
Notable people
Wirral has been home to many notable people, including: Ian Botham (cricketer), current Antiques Roadshow presenter Fiona Bruce, Daniel Craig (actor), Steve Cummings (cyclist), Paul Hollywood (baker and competition judge), Simon Rimmer (chef and TV presenter), Shirley Ballas (dancer and TV personality), Dickie Davies (TV sports presenter), Matt Dawson (rugby union player), Mike Dean (football referee), Austin Healey (rugby union player), Emma Hamilton (mistress of Horatio Nelson), Shirley Hughes (author and illustrator), Andrew Irvine (Everest climber), Glenda Jackson (actress and politician), Paul O'Grady (TV presenter), John Peel (disc jockey and radio presenter), Patricia Routledge (actress), Louise Delamere (actress), Dominic Purcell (actor), Chris Boardman (cyclist), Jim Bowen (TV Presenter and comedian), Pete Burns (singer of pop band Dead or Alive), Lee Latchford Evans (singer with pop group Steps and actor) Harold Wilson (Prime Minister who was Head Boy of Wirral Grammar School for Boys) and Sam Quek (British field hockey player.) Several pop groups, rock bands and artists also come from the area including Miles Kane, Elvis Costello, The Boo Radleys, Half Man Half Biscuit, Engine, The Coral, The Rascals and Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark.

Television and film
Wirral has hosted a variety of different films and television programmes. Chariots of Fire was filmed at various locations in Wirral including the Oval Sports Centre, Bebington and the Woodside Ferry Terminal,[29] while the 1950 Ealing comedy The Magnet was filmed in Wallasey and New Brighton.

The 51st State was partly filmed around the docks in Birkenhead. Awaydays, based on a novel of the same name by Kevin Sampson, was filmed extensively in Wirral.[30] In 2012 the movie Blood, starring Paul Bettany and Stephen Graham was filmed in Wirral.[31]

The Queensway Tunnel in Birkenhead is also featured in the Harry Potter film, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1 during the scene where Harry and Hagrid escape on a flying motorcycle and pass through the tunnel. The scene was filmed while the tunnel was closed for repairs.[32] The 2013 film Fast & Furious 6 tunnel chase scene was filmed in the Queensway Tunnel. The unused Birkenhead Dock branch of the Queensway Tunnel was filmed as a New York underpass in the 2014 movie Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit. In October 2017, the tunnel branch was used for the filming of the drama, Bulletproof, starring Noel Clarke and Ashley Walters.[33]

Scenes for the 2016 film Florence Foster Jenkins, starring Hugh Grant and Meryl Streep, were filmed around New Brighton.

In television, sitcom Watching, produced by Granada Television between 1987 and 1993, was partly set and filmed at various Wirral locations, particularly Meols.[34][35] More recently, Mike Bassett: Manager, starring Ricky Tomlinson was a follow-up to the film Mike Bassett: England Manager, and featured a fictional football club called Wirral County, a parody of Tranmere Rovers, who Bassett (Tomlinson) managed after being sacked from the England job. It is also believed that the Lime Pictures production Hollyoaks films occasionally, on location, in Wirral. The BBC comedy drama Candy Cabs filmed external scenes in West Kirby and Hoylake in 2011. Wallasey School featured in Grease: The School Musical on Sky 1 in 2009.

The BBC Two drama "Peaky Blinders" often films at various locations in Wirral, including Port Sunlight village. The second series Peter Kay's Car Share also filmed at various Wirral locations including Meols and West Kirby. Sky One's 2016 thriller, The Five, starring Lee Ingleby shot scenes around Wirral including in Port Sunlight.

The 2017 ITV drama Safe House starring Jason Watkins and Sunetra Sarker filmed several scenes on the peninsula. In the autumn of 2017 filming began in Port Sunlight and Thornton Hough for a new biopic about the author Tolkien starring Nicholas Hoult.[36]

A row of cottages in the historic village of Port Sunlight also featured on the 2014 series of BBC Two's The Great Interior Design Challenge. The village also played host to two episodes of BBC One's The Antiques Roadshow hosted by former Wirral resident TV presenter Fiona Bruce.

Transport
The M53 motorway runs along the length of Wirral, from near Chester. At the north eastern end, Wirral is joined to Liverpool by three tunnels under the Mersey: two road tunnels, one from Wallasey (Kingsway) and one from Birkenhead (Queensway), and the Mersey Railway tunnel.

The Wirral peninsula is served by a network of bus routes. These are provided by larger companies whose networks of bus services in the North West of England are extensive, such as Arriva North West and Stagecoach Wirral. Furthermore, the peninsula is also served by many independent bus operators, the largest being Avon Buses who operate many services without subsidy from Merseytravel. Other independent bus companies which operate on the peninsula include A2B Travel, Cumfybus, Helms Coaches and Eazibus.

Most bus services operate from the three bus stations: Birkenhead bus station, Heswall bus station and Woodside bus station, although many services start from other interchanges, such as New Brighton, Seacombe Ferry and Liscard Village.

The Wirral Line of the electrified Merseyrail network links West Kirby, New Brighton, Chester and Ellesmere Port via many other towns and villages to all four of Liverpool's city centre stations (James Street, Moorfields, Lime Street and Liverpool Central) through the underground Loop tunnel. Another railway line, the Borderlands Line, offers hourly diesel services from Bidston (on the West Kirby branch of the Wirral Line) to Wrexham in North Wales.

Regular Mersey Ferry crossings operate to Liverpool from both Woodside and Seacombe, providing a commuter shuttle and pleasure cruises.

The nearest passenger airports are Liverpool John Lennon Airport and Manchester Airport. There were plans to introduce commercial flights to nearby Hawarden Airport in North Wales,[37] but these plans were dropped in 2014.[38][39]

Sports
Football
Tranmere Rovers Football Club is Wirral's only professional football club and play at Prenton Park, Birkenhead. They play in League One of The Football League.
Cammell Laird 1907 F.C. are a non-league football club on Wirral and play in the North West Counties League at North West Construction Stadium formerly Kirklands, Rock Ferry.
Several Football League teams have played at New Brighton including the defunct New Brighton Tower F.C. and New Brighton A.F.C., who most recently played in the West Cheshire League.
Golf
The Open Championship was played at the Royal Liverpool Golf Club in Hoylake in 1897, 1902, 1907, 1913, 1924, 1930, 1936, 1947, 1956, 1967, 2006 and 2014. The Open is due to return to the Royal Liverpool for the 13th time in 2022.[40] The Women's British Open was played at Royal Liverpool in 2012.
Rugby
Caldy RFC play at Paton Field, Thurstaston. They are a rugby union club who play in England's third tier, the National League 1.
Wirral Warriors play at the Memorial Ground in Clatterbridge. They are members of the Rugby League Conference.[41]
Birkenhead Park FC play at the Upper Park in Birkenhead Park and compete in the fifth tier of rugby union, National League 3 North .[42]
Wirral Rugby Club founded 1936 by former pupils of Wirral Grammar School for Boys and play rugby union at Memorial Ground near Clatterbridge .[43]
Anselmians RUFC formed 1947 by former pupils of St Anselm's College.They play rugby union at Eastham.[44]
Hoylake RUFC
Port Sunlight RFC formed in 1908 by employees of the Lever Brothers company[45]
Oldershaw RUFC [46]
New Brighton RUFC
Watersports
Hoylake, in north west Wirral is one of the premier European land sailing (sand yachting) sites, and was host to the week-long European Championships in September 2007 and again in 2011.[47]
West Kirby, in north west Wirral has a marine lake for windsurfing, sailing and sea kayaking and hosts the British Open Team Racing Championship (Wilson Trophy) sailing competition.
New Brighton is a popular place for jet-skiing.
Sea kayaking is also popular in the Dee and Mersey Estuaries.
Rowing; Liverpool Victoria Rowing Club, despite its name, is and always has been in Wallasey, rowing on the Great Float.
Cricket
Birkenhead Park Cricket Club
Birkenhead St Mary's Cricket Club
Irby Cricket Club
Neston Cricket Club
Upton Cricket Club
Wirral Cricket Club was founded in 1936 as part of the Wirral Club. The club became noted after recording the game's lowest score in 100 years, on 27 April 2014

جوشوا كينغ

جوشوا كينغ (بالنرويجية: Joshua King‏) مواليد 15 يناير 1992 في أوسلو، هو لاعب كرة قدم نرويجي يلعب كمهاجم مع نادي بورنموث. مثّل منتخب النرويج لكرة القدم.

Josh King

Joshua Christian Kojo King (born 15 January 1992) is a Norwegian professional footballer who plays as a striker for Premier League club AFC Bournemouth and the Norway national team.

King was signed by Manchester United from Vålerenga in 2008. After loan spells with Preston North End, Borussia Mönchengladbach, Hull City and Blackburn Rovers, he signed permanently with Blackburn in January 2013, before switching to Bournemouth in May 2015.

After representing Norway at under-15, under-16, under-18, under-19 and under-21 levels, King made his senior international debut against Iceland in 2012, and scored his first international goal against Cyprus later that year
Early life
Born in Oslo, to a Gambian father and a Norwegian mother, King grew up in the suburb of Romsås.[3] He began his career with the local club, Romsås IL, before switching to Vålerenga when he was 15.[4] While at Vålerenga, King trained with English side Manchester United on multiple occasions, but UEFA rules prevented him from signing a contract with the club until he was 16.[5] He also had trial offers from Chelsea, Sunderland and Ipswich Town, but rejected those in favour of Manchester United.[4]

Club career
Manchester United
King signed for Manchester United when he turned 16 in January 2008,[6] and made his debut for the under-18 side in a 5–1 home defeat to Sunderland on 29 March 2008.[7] He played just once more in the league that season, as well as making five substitute appearances in the Blue Stars Youth Cup in May 2008. He began the following season by scoring four goals in four matches as the Manchester United Under-17s won the 2008 Milk Cup.[8][9][10][11] He then played in two matches at the start of the 2008–09 Premier Academy League season before an injury in October 2008 kept him out until January 2009.[12][13][14]

Two games after his comeback, King scored twice in a 5–0 win over Bolton Wanderers on 31 January 2009.[15] The following week, he was named as an unused substitute for the reserves in a Manchester Senior Cup match against Stockport County,[16] before making his reserve debut as a substitute for Robbie Brady in a Premier Reserve League match against Bolton Wanderers three days later.[17] He then made his first start of the season for the Under-18s against Manchester City on 14 February, only to miss the next two months of the season. He returned at the start of April 2009,[18] just in time to play in the run-in to the end of the Under-18 league season, as United finished in second place, 19 points behind winners Manchester City.

At the start of the 2009–10 season, King came on as a substitute for Zoran Tošić in the final of the Lancashire Senior Cup, a 1–0 win over Bolton Wanderers.[19] He then started the reserves' first three league games of the season,[20][21][22] and was rewarded for his performances by being given a place on the bench for the first team's League Cup third round match against Wolverhampton Wanderers on 23 September 2009. He was given the number 41 jersey and came on as an 81st-minute substitute for goalscorer Danny Welbeck. Although King had two opportunities to add to United's lead, the match finished 1–0 and United progressed to the fourth round of the competition.[23] He was again named as a substitute for the fourth round match against Barnsley, but he did not take to the field.[24] King was an integral part of the under-18s side for the remainder of the season, scoring six goals in 14 appearances as the team won Group C of the 2009–10 Premier Academy League;[25] they were drawn against Arsenal in the play-off semi-finals, and although King scored his penalty in the shoot-out after the match finished in a 1–1 draw, Arsenal ultimately won 5–3.[26]

Preston North End
After impressing for Manchester United in the 2010–11 pre-season, King joined Football League Championship side Preston North End – managed by Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson's son, Darren – on a three-month loan deal on 7 August 2010, becoming Preston's 1,000th player[27] and linking up with fellow United loanee Matty James.[28] He made his debut the next day, coming on as a 70th-minute substitute for Paul Hayes in Preston's 2–0 defeat by Doncaster Rovers on the opening day of the 2010–11 season.[29]

King's first goal for Preston came in his second match, a League Cup first round tie against Stockport County on 10 August; after coming on as a 72nd-minute substitute for Chris Brown, he intercepted a goal kick from Andy Lonergan and curled the ball past the Stockport goalkeeper, making the final score 5–0. He had earlier added an assist after running 60 yards down the right wing and crossing for Paul Hayes' second goal – the fourth of the match.[30] King made his first start for Preston on 21 August, playing the full 90 minutes of the team's 1–0 home win over Portsmouth; King was named man of the match for his performance, in which he repeatedly threatened the Portsmouth goal.[31]

King played in seven of Preston's first 12 league games, but suffered an ankle injury at the end of October 2010 that ruled him out for the rest of the loan, and he returned to Manchester United.[32] After his recovery towards the end of November, King returned to Preston on another loan until 4 January 2011;[33] however, he made just one more appearance for the club before being recalled by Manchester United a few days early.[34] Some sources suggested that Alex Ferguson recalled King and fellow loanees Matty James and Ritchie De Laet in retaliation for Preston sacking his son, Darren,[35] but Alex later indicated that King and De Laet had not enjoyed their time at Preston and did not want to return to the club.[36]

Return to Manchester United
After his return to Manchester United, King was a regular in the reserve team, playing in 17 of the last 18 games of the season; his only absence came against Arsenal on 28 April 2011. He was also regularly on the scoresheet, particularly in the Manchester Senior Cup, in which he scored twice in an 8–0 win over Bury[37] and three times in a 6–1 win over Rochdale.[38] He also hit two against Oldham Athletic in the quarter-finals of the Lancashire Senior Cup[39] and against Chelsea in the Premier Reserve League[40] to finish the season with 11 goals as the team won the Manchester Senior Cup and the Premier Reserve League North.

In among these performances, King was also named on the bench for three first-team matches, including Manchester United's 4–0 away league win over Wigan Athletic and their FA Cup wins over Crawley Town and Arsenal,[41][42][43] as well as travelling with the team for the first leg of their Champions League round of 16 tie with Marseille.[44] In recognition of his performances in the second half of the season, King was rewarded with a new two-year contract with Manchester United, keeping him at the club until the summer of 2013
In August 2011, King joined German club Borussia Mönchengladbach on loan for the duration of the 2011–12 season. The loan agreement between Borussia and Manchester United was first announced by Borussia's director of sport, Max Eberl, at the club's general meeting on 29 May 2011,[46] but the move was held up when King suffered a groin injury requiring surgery while on international duty with the Norway Under-21 side.[47] Borussia confirmed the loan transfer on 22 July 2011, the terms of which were undisclosed by either club, although it was still subject to King passing a medical examination on 1 August.[48] He began individual training with Borussia on 2 August,[49] before linking up with the rest of the squad shortly afterwards. King made his first appearance for Borussia Mönchengladbach as a substitute on 19 August 2011, in Borussia's 4–1 win against VfL Wolfsburg.[50] After just one more substitute appearance and a total of 19 minutes on the field, a recurrence of King's groin injury resulted in his loan spell being terminated early.[51]

Having returned to England, King joined Hull City on loan for the rest of the 2011–12 season on 16 January 2012.[52] He made his debut as an 86th-minute substitute for Liam Rosenior in a 1–0 away win at Reading on 21 January.[53] King played in four consecutive matches at the start of his spell at Hull, but on 9 February 2012, he appeared for the Manchester United reserves in their 4–2 Manchester Senior Cup defeat at home to Manchester City;[54] he played for 61 minutes of the match before being replaced by Reece Brown.[55] It took until 9 April for King to score his first goal for Hull, scoring the equaliser as Hull came from behind to beat Middlesbrough 2–1; King also provided the assist for Matty Fryatt's winning goal.[56]

King returned to Manchester United on 1 May and went straight back into the reserve team for their Lancashire Senior Cup semi-final against Blackpool; Manchester United won 5–4 on penalties after neither side could produce a goal in normal time, with King scoring United's first penalty.[57] Another penalty shoot-out followed in King's next match for the reserves, the Premier Reserve League play-off match against the winners of the south section, Aston Villa; after coming on as a substitute for captain Davide Petrucci, King was one of three scorers for Manchester United in the shoot-out as they won 3–1 to take the title.[58]

Blackburn Rovers
At the start of the 2012–13 season, King found himself a regular in the Manchester United reserve team, and scored the team's last goal in the 90th minute of their 4–0 win over Accrington Stanley in the final of the Lancashire Senior Cup on 8 August 2012.[60] However, despite playing in seven of the reserves' first nine games of the season, he was unable to make the step up to the first team – he was an unused substitute in the League Cup third round match against Newcastle United on 26 September,[61] and came on as a substitute for Danny Welbeck in the 85th minute of the dead rubber Champions League group match against Galatasaray on 20 November.[62]

In search of first-team football, King was allowed to join Blackburn Rovers on loan until 31 December 2012,[63] with a view to eventually making the move permanent. Despite competition up front from Jordan Rhodes, Colin Kazim-Richards, Ruben Rochina and Nuno Gomes,[64] he made his debut two days later, coming on as a 55th-minute substitute for Marcus Olsson in a 2–0 defeat at home to Millwall.[65] He scored his first goal for the club at home to Cardiff City on 7 December, an equaliser after Mark Hudson had put Cardiff in front; however, Cardiff scored a further three goals and won 4–1.[66] After scoring two goals in eight appearances, King's transfer to Blackburn was made permanent as he signed a two-and-a-half-year contract on 2 January 2013, with the option of extending the deal by a further year.[67] In an FA Cup match against Derby County on 26 January,[68] he was forced to come off with a hamstring injury; he had also missed the three games prior to that with the same injury.[69] He went on to make a total of 20 appearances for Blackburn that season.[68]

His first goal of the 2013–14 season came on 24 August in Blackburn's 5–2 victory over Barnsley, where he converted a Todd Kane pass into a goal from six yards out.[70] On 14 February 2015, King scored his first Rovers hat trick in a 4–1 win against Stoke City in the FA Cup 5th round.[71] He did not net any other goals that season.

AFC Bournemouth
On 28 May 2015, after turning down a new contract at Blackburn, King switched to AFC Bournemouth ahead of their first-ever season in the Premier League. He credited the ethos of manager Eddie Howe and the opportunity to be a top-flight regular as his reasons to sign.[72] He made his debut for Bournemouth on 8 August as they began the season with a 0–1 home defeat against Aston Villa.[73] King's first goal for the Cherries came on 21 November, when he opened a 2–2 draw at Swansea City;[74] on 12 December he scored the winning goal from a corner kick routine as Bournemouth beat his former club United 2–1 at Dean Court.[75] Contrary to the common courtesy, he enthusiastically celebrated his goal against his former employers, and later told the Daily Mail that manager Alex Ferguson refused to speak to him or any of the other young players at the time.[76] King finished the season as Bournemouth's top scorer, scoring seven times in all competitions, with six of those coming in the Premier League.

From late February to March 2017, King scored five goals in three Premier League matches, including an equalising goal on his return to Old Trafford, and concluding with a hat-trick in a 3–2 home win over West Ham despite missing a spot-kick in the first ten minutes of that match. He became the sixth Norwegian player to score three times in a Premier League match.[77]

On 29 August 2017, King signed a new four-year contract with Bournemouth.[78]

International career
After representing Norway at youth international level, Egil Olsen called up King to Norway's squad for two World Cup qualifiers in September 2012.[79] He made his debut against Iceland on 7 September 2012, when he replaced Mohammed Abdellaoue after 65 minutes.[80] King had the ball in the back of the net eight minutes later, but the goal was disallowed.[81] Four days later in Norway's next match, he replaced Abdellaoue at half time against Slovenia.[82] King replaced Alexander Søderlund as a substitute at half time against Cyprus in Larnaca on 16 October 2012, then won a penalty and scored the last goal in Norway's 3–1 victory.[83]

He was included in the Norway squad for the 2013 UEFA European Under-21 Football Championship, but as he was a regular member of the senior squad he had to play the World Cup qualifying match against Albania, along with his under-21 teammates Valon Berisha, Håvard Nordtveit and Markus Henriksen before they traveled to the championship in Israel.[84] King appeared in the under-21 team's matches against Italy U-21 and Spain U-21 during the championship.[68]

He scored his second full international goal in his next appearance, scoring the second goal in a 2–0 victory over Cyprus on 6 September 2013.[85] On 10 October 2014, he scored two goals against Malta in a 3–0 away win in UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying,[86] but was dropped by manager Per-Mathias Høgmo from their play-off against Hungary in place of Veton Berisha, Marcus Pedersen and Alexander Søderlund


نهىً نبيل

نهى نبيل (من مواليد 11 نوفمبر 1983)، إعلامية وشاعرة كويتية من أصول مصرية، حيث إن أمها كويتية الجنسية ووالدها مصري الجنسية. درست الهندسة الكيميائية في جامعة الكويت، وتخرجت بتقدير امتياز مع مرتبة الشرف عام 2005. التحقت بالعمل الإعلامي منذ عام 1992 كمقدمة لبرامج الأطفال في إذاعة وتلفزيون دولة الكويت حيث كان عمرها لا يتجاوز تسع سنوات، رشحت للفوز بلقب أفضل مقدمة برامج أطفال في مهرجان القاهرة عام 2000 وهي لم تتجاوز بعد عامها السابع عشر وتعتبر من أهم الشخصيات في مجال التواصل الإجتماعي وأكثرها تأثيرا في الكويت.

شاركت بالعديد من الأمسيات الشعرية المميزة كشاعرة نبطية منذ عام 2003 في مهرجان خريف صلالة، مهرجان أيام البحرين، مهرجان هلا فبراير في الكويت ومهرجان صيف دبي. قدمت العديد من البرامج الشبابية والحوارية والمنوعة على قنوات الكويت وقناة الرأي الكويتية وقناة روتانا السعودية وقناة دبي وأبو ظبي الإماراتيتين وقناة الوطن الكويتية. اعتزلت العمل الإعلامي للتفرغ لوظيفتها كمهندسة بعد زواجها من زميلها المهندس الدكتور إبراهيم في ديسمبر 2008، وهي شقيقة مقدمة البرامج نوف نبيل. عادت للظهور الإعلامي ككاتبة في مجال الموضة، ولها مدونة خاصة بالموضة وصيحاتها منذ عام 2009، ظهورها الأول بعد غياب كان كضيفة خلال برنامج رايكم شباب في سبتمبر 2013 وعادت لتقديم البرامج في عام 2016 من خلال تقديمها لبرنامج نهى لايف على قناة الراي.
إنجازات
تعتبر نهى نبيل من أكثر الشخصيات التي حرصت الماركات و الشركات العالميه للتعاقد معها في مجال الدعاية و الإعلان في الشرق الأوسط و كان لديها العديد من التعاونات و المحطات الشهيره منها :

- أول إعلاميه كويتيه تتم دعوتها رسميا لحضور مهرجان كان السينمائي مع دار مجوهرات ميسيكا عام 2018.

- أول كويتيه تسير على السجاده الحمراء في مهرجان البندقية السينمائي بدعوه خاصه من دار جيجير لوكوتلر للساعات السويسريه العريقه للأعوام 2017، 2018 على التوالي.

- ماركه "بورجوا " الفرنسيه تتعاون مع نهى نبيل لإطلاق مجموعتها الخاصة من أحمر الشفاه في أول تعاون من نوعه منذ انطلاق الماركه من أكثر من 200 عام .

- الوجه الإعلاني لمجوهرات فيرشاتشي الشرق الأوسط 2019 .

- نهى نبيل الوجه الإعلاني لحمله أزياء ريفا الرمضانيه عام 2018 .

- دار مجوهرات سواروفسكي تختار نهى نبيل أول وجه إعلاني لها من الشرق الأوسط لعام 2019.

- شركه ديتول العالميه تتعاون مع نهى نبيل كأول وجه إعلاني من رواد التواصل الإجتماعي 2018

- عطورات إبراهيم القرشي تطلق مجموعه عطور حصريه مع مدونه الجمال و الموضه نهى نبيل 2018

تكريمات
حصدت نهى نبيل على العديد من الجوائز و التكريمات خلال مشوارها الإعلامي أهمها ،

الشخصيه الأكثر تأثيرا في العالم العربي من خلال مهرجان المميزون في رمضان للأعوام 2015، 2016، 2017، 2018 .
اختيارها من ضمن أكثر 5 شخصيات نسائيه مؤثره في العالم العربي عبر مجلة فوربس العالمية عام 2017 .
أفضل شخصيه عبر مواقع التواصل الإجتماعي في مهرجان أهل الفن و الإعلام للأعوام 2016، 2017، 2018 .
تكريمها كواحدة من أهم الشخصيات في قمه رواد مواقع التواصل الإجتماعي في دبي 2016، 2017 .
تعتبر الأولى في الكويت بعدد المتابعين بموقع انستقرام بمعدل7 مليون متابع.
2019: الكويتجائزة الشخصية الأكثر تأثيرا في وسائل التواصل الاجتماعي والسوشيال ميديا (نمبر ون) من مهرجان المميزون 

خالد بشارة

خالد بشارة (1971- 2020)، رجل أعمال مصري شغل منصب العضو المنتدب لمجموعة أوراسكوم تيليكوم القابضة، كما أنه أحد أعضاء مجلس إدارة أوراسكوم تيليكوم القابضة منذ عام 2003 وعضو مجلس إدارة بشركة ويند للاتصالات.

تم تعيين بشارة مديراً عاماً للعمليات لدى أوراسكوم تيليكوم في أبريل 2009. والجدير بالذكر أنه كان يشغل منصب مدير عام العمليات لشركة ويند للاتصالات ويعتبر زاخراً بالخبرات في مجال تكنولوجيا الاتصالات والمعلومات حيث أنه يتمتع بخبرة إدارية واسعة علاوة على خبراته في تنظيم المشاريع،

رأس بشارة وحدة الخط الثابت والبوابة التجارية لدى شركة ويند للاتصالات اعتباراً من عام 2005 وترقى في المناصب حتى تم تعيينه الرئيس التنفيذي للعمليات بالشركة. لعب دوراً جوهرياً ومؤثراً في إعادة هيكلة تنظيم الشركة مما ترتب عليه إحداث تحوّل إيجابي في شركة ويند من شركة تتكبد الخسائر باستمرار إلى واحدة من أفضل الشركات المتخصصة في تشغيل الهاتف المحمول والخطوط الأرضية وخدمة البرودباند (Broad Band) في أوروبا خلال فترة زمنية قصيرة بلغت ثلاثة أعوام. قبل التحاقه بشركة ويند كان عضواً مؤسساً لشركة لينك دوت نت حيث أنه كان يشغل منصب رئيساً للشركة والرئيس التنفيذي لها وتعتبر تلك الشركة من أكبر مقدمي خدمة الإنترنت الخاص (مزود خدمة الإنترنت) في الشرق الأوسط. وفي عام 2001، وبعد مفاوضات ناجحة، اختارت مايكروسوفت الدخول في شراكة مع شركة لينك دوت نت التي يرأسها بشارة لإطلاق (MSN Arabia)، أول بوابة عالمية في الشرق الأوسط، والتي تقدم خبرة إم إس إن الكاملة في الإنترنت للمستخدمين في المنطقة.

في ديسمبر 2003، اختارت مجلة Egypt Business Today خالد بشارة ليكون "أفضل رئيس تنفيذي للعام" تحت سن 40 عاماً.

حصل بشارة على درجة البكالوريوس من الجامعة الأمريكية بالقاهرة في علوم الحاسب حيث يعمل عضواً في المجلس الاستشاري لقسم علوم الكمبيوتر والهندسة.
وفاته
توفي يوم الجمعة 31 يناير 2020 إثر حادث سير بالقرب من ميدان الرماية بالساعات الاولى من الفجر يوم الجمعة. و تم نقله إلى اقرب مستشفى و لكن لفظ أنفاسه بعد ساعة من المحاولات العديدة لإنقاذه التى باءت بالفشل.

الخميس، 30 يناير 2020

إنتر ميلان

نادي إنترناسيونالي ميلانو لكرة القدم (بالإيطالية: Football Club Internazionale Milano) أو كما يعرف بـ إنترناسيونالي ميلانو (بالإيطالية: Internazionale Milano)، واختصاراً يسمى باسم الإنتر (بالإيطالية: Inter) ويعرف كذلك في خارج إيطاليا باسم إنتر ميلان (بالإيطالية: Inter Milan)، هو نادي كرة قدم محترف مشهور تأسس سنة 1908 بمدينة ميلانو في إقليم لومبارديا في إيطاليا. يعرف الفريق بلونيه الأسود والأزرق، ويشتهر في إيطاليا بلقب "النيراتزوري" (بالإيطالية: Nerazzuri) (بالعربية: الأسود والأزرق). يشارك الفريق في الدوري الإيطالي الدرجة الأول منذ تأسيسه سنة 1908 وقد فاز بـ30 بطولة محلية، بما فيها 18 لقب للدوري الإيطالي، وكأس إيطاليا سبع مرات، وكأس السوبر الإيطالي 5 مرات، وبذلك يعتبر النادي الأكثر نجاحا في إيطاليا بالمشاركة مع غريمة التقليدي إيه سي ميلان، بعد نادي يوفنتوس، والوحيد الذي لم يسقط إلى دوري الدرجة الثانية منذ انضمامه سنة 1908.

أما دولياً، فاز الفريق بـدوري أبطال أوروبا ثلاث مرات، اثنتان منها في الستينيات من القرن الماضي وبالتحديد عامي 1964 و1965. وانتظر 45 عاما ليفوز بها في النظام الجديد سنة 2010 بعد نجاحه في تحقيق إنجاز تاريخي بالفوز بخمسة بطولات من أصل ست ممكنة.ويملك أيضا ثلاث كؤوس اتحاد أوروبي بنظامها القديم أعوام 1990 و1994 و1998. وكأسي إنتركونتيننتال في عام 1964 و1965، وكأس العالم للأندية مرة واحدة في عام 2010. في عام 2010، أصبح نادي إنتر ميلانو أول نادي في إيطاليا يفوز بالثلاثية والتي تتكون من الكالتشيو، كأس إيطاليا، دوري أبطال أوروبا. في ذلك العام نفسه، بات أيضا أول ناد إيطالي لكرة القدم يفوز بخمسة من أصل ست بطولات في عام واحد، وتشمل خماسية الموسم الثلاثية المذكورة سابقا وكأس السوبر الإيطالي وكأس العالم للأندية.

ومن ناحية أخرى يُعتبر إنتر ميلان عضواً مؤسساً في مجموعة جي-14 للأندية القيادية الأوروبية، التي تم إلغاؤها حاليّا واستبدلت برابطة الأندية الأوروبية. بحسب تقرير مجلة فوربس يُعتبر إنتر ميلان من أغنى أندية العالم، الثالث في إيطاليا، حيث بلغت قيمته السوقية لسنة 2015 مبلغ 439 مليون دولار، وهو ضمن أندية كرة القدم العشرون الأكثر تحقيقاً للإيرادات خلال الموسم 2014-15 إذ بلغت قيمة إيراداتة نحو 165 مليون يورو. وفي عام 2010, احتل الإنتر المركز الثاني في ترتيب أكثر الفرق الإيطالية جماهيريةً، والثامن أوروبياً.

يلعب نادي إنتر ميلانو كل مبارياته الرسمية في ملعب جوزيبي مياتسا (سان سيرو) الذي يتسع لـ 85,443 متفرج، ويشاركه في نفس الملعب قطب ميلانو الآخر نادي ميلان والذي يجمع بينهما أشهر ديربي في العالم يسمى بـديربي ميلانو. يرأس النادي رجل الأعمال الأندونيسي الشهير ايريك توهير منذ أكتوبر 2013، بعدما اشترى 70% من حصة النادي بصفقة بلغت 501 مليون يورو، تاركاً 30% من نصيب الرئيس السابق ماسيمو موراتي والذي عين كرئيس شرفي للنادي، وهو ابن أنجلو موراتي رئيس النادي الذي قاد فريق الستينيات المعروف باسم "القراندي إنتر" أي الإنتر الكبير، منذ 2014 يدرب الفريق المدرب الايطالي لوتشانو سباليتي. وفي يونيو من عام 2016 قامت مجموعة سونينغ القابضة والمملوكة من قبل مجموعة سونينغ الاستثمارية، بالإستحواذ على أغلب أسم النادي (68.55%) بعدما تخلى ماسيمو موراتي عن حصته في ملكية النادي والتي بلغت 30%، وشرت جزء من حصة انترناشيونال سبورتس كابيتال المملوكة لرجل الأعمال الإندونيسي ايريك توهير، بصفقة قُدرت قيمتها بما يتراوح بين 600 مليون يورو.
تأسس نادي إنتر ميلان في ليلة 9 مارس 1908 بمطعم كان آنذاك ملتقى نخبة المدينة من المثقفين والفنانين بمدينة ميلانو، وذلك عندما رفضت العديد من الأندية الإيطالية مشاركة اللاعبين الأجانب في مباريات الدوري، ووافق الاتحاد الإيطالي لكرة القدم على هذا، الأمر الذي جعل أقوى الأندية آنذاك (إيه سي ميلان وتورينو وجنوة)، تُقدم على مقاطعة الدوري، إلا أن جماعة من إدارة الميلان كانت موافقة على قرار الاتحاد، فانشقت عن نادي ميلان لكرة القدم والكريكيت أربعة من لاعبيه، الذين أبدوا حزنهم لعنصرية الإيطالين في فريق أي سي ميلان حين ذاك وبالتالي قرروا الانفصال.

فتجمع عدداً من اللاعين أغلبهم من غير الإيطاليين، وكوّنوا نادي إنترناسيونالي (لم تضف كلمة ميلانو إلا في 1967). وكانت الكنيه الأصلية للفريق في ميلانو "La Beneamata" أي المحبوب. وكان من بين مؤسسي النادي وسكرتيره بعد ذلك الفنان والرسام جيورجيو موجياني الذي استوحى من تلك الليلة ألوان النادي وشعار الفريق. الأحرف الأولى "FCIM" مضفرة بدائرتين ذهبيتين، واللون الأسود[؟] والأزرق المستوحاة من ألوان الليل والسماء. ولأن النادي اسمه مشتق من رغبة أعضاؤه المؤسسين في قبول اللاعبين الأجانب مع الإيطاليين، فقد كان أول قائد للنادي هو السويسري هيرنست مانكتل.

وكان أول رئيس للنادي هو جيوفاني باراميتيوتي، وأول قائد هوالسويسري هيرنست مانكتل، بينما أول مدرب كان فيرجيليو فوساتي.وفي ثاني مواسم الفريق في الدوري تمكن الإنتر من ربح أول بطولة في الدوري له في عام 1910 بقيادة الكابتن فيرجيليو فوساتي ولكن لسوء الحظ مات القائد فيرجيليو فوساتي في الحرب العالمية الأولى في الجبهة الشرقية.وبعد هذه الحادثة فاز الإنتر باللقب الثاني له بعد عشر سنوات من اللقب الأول سنة 1920.

البدايات (1922–1954)

عدما فاز الإنتر بلقبه الأول في بطولة الدوري الإيطالي، تلى ذلك الموسم مواسم مخيبة للآمال. ومع إندلاع الحرب العالمية الأولى توقفت منافسات كرة القدم، ثم ما لبت أن عادت للحياة في عام 1920 بعد إنتهاء الحرب، وفاز بلقب الدوري الإيطالي للمرة الثانية. ومع بداية الفاشية في إيطاليا، وفي عام 1928 أُجبِرَ نادي الإنتر إلى تغيير اسمه إلى أمبروزيانا إنتر (بالإيطالية: Ambrosiana Inter) بعد دمجه مع نادي الاتحاد الرياضي بميلانو (بالإيطالية: Milanese Unione Sportiva)، خوفاً من نظام بينيتو موسوليني المتشدد والمتسمك بالعنصرية الإيطالية.

ورغم هذا القرار تمكن النادي المدمج من كسب بطولة ثالثة في الدوري الإيطالي الجديد في عام 1930 ساهم فيها جوسيبي مياتزا بشكل كبير بعدما سجل 31 هدفا حاصدآً جائزة الهداف (كابوكانونييري). وبعد ذلك تمكن الإنتر مرة رابعة من تحقيق البطولة عام 1938. ومن ثم حصد أول كأس إيطاليا في عام 1940 بعدما فاز على نادي نوفارا في المباراة النهائية. وفي نفس العام حقق الانتر البطولة الخامسة. ومن عام 1942 تم إعادة اسم الإنتر إلى ماهو عليه الآن. بعد الحرب العالمية الثانية ربح الانتر البطولة السادسة عام 1953 والسابعة في عام 1954 وبعد تلك البطولات دخل الانتر أفضل السنوات في تاريخه المعروفة بعصره "La Grande Inter" "الإنتر العظيم".

العصر الذهبي (1954–1968)
تعتبر فترة الستينات والسبعينات هي أفضل الفترات في تاريخ الإنتر حيث أطلق على الفريق بذاك الوقت بالـ " القراندي إنتر " (بالإيطالية: Grande Inter) والتي تعني الإنتر الكبير. إذ حقق فيها العديد من البطولات بقيادة رئيس النادي الإيطالي أنجلو موراتي الذي أحضر المدرب الأرجنتيني هيلينيو هيريرا من نادي برشلونة، مع استقدام كوكبة رائعة من اللاعبين أمثال الإيطاليين فاكيتي وماتسولا والإسباني لويس سواريز. تبنى الأرجنتيني هيلينيو هيريرا خطة الكاتيناتشو مع تعديل بسيط، حيث لعب بخطة 5-3-2 بوجود قلبي دفاع وخلفهم ليبرو، والذي تقتضي مهتمه التعامل مع أي مهاجم ينجح في تخطي قلبي الدفاع، كما أن له دور في توزيع الكرة بعد الاستحواذ عليها، وبداية الهجمات المضادة.

بهذه الخطة الجديدة، استطاع فريق الإنتر أن ينهي في الموسم الأول مع المدرب في المركز الثالث، وفي الموسم الذي تلاه أصبح وصيفاً، وفي الموسم الذي تلاه وهو موسم 1962-63 استطاع الفوز باللقب بعد صيام دام 9 سنوات. وقد حقق النادي في تلك الفترة 3 بطولات للدوري الإيطالي أعوام 1963 و1965 و1966، والأخير هو الدوري الإيطالي العاشر الذي سمح للنادي بارتداء نجمة ذهبية واحدة على قمصانهم.

تلت تلك الإنتصارات المحلية، انتصارات أوروبية حيث استطاع الإنتر الفوز بـدوري أبطال أوروبا بمسماها القديم لموسمين متتالين، ففي موسم 1963-64 حصد اللقب بعدما فاز على ريال مدريد بقيادة مهاجمه الخطير ألفريدو دي ستيفانو بنتيجة 3-1 بعدما سجل ماتسولا هدفي الفوز، وفاز باللقب الثاني في موسم 1964-65 بعدما فاز في المباراة النهائية بينتحة 1-0 على نادي بنفيكا بقيادة أوزيبيو. الفوز بلقبي دوري أبطال أوروبا سمح للإنتر بلعب منافسات كأس الإنتركونتيننتال مرتين، كلا القائين كان أمام نادي إنديبندينتي الآرجنتيني، وانتهوا بفوز الإنتر.

بعدها حاول أنجلو موراتي -والد ماسيمو موراتي- إحضار المزيد من اللاعبين المميزين أمثال أوزيبيو وبيليه ولكنه قوبل بالسياسات الاستبدادية فلم يقبل في البرازيل ومنع في البرتغال، ولهذا توقف العصر الذهبي الأول في سنة 1967 بعد الوصول من جديد إلى النهائي دوري أبطال أوروبا، وخسر أمام سلتيك بهدف نظيف، بعدما تم إيقاف ماتسولا، وبعدما أصيب لويس سواريز وغاب عن المباراة النهائية.

فترة ما بعد هيلينيو هيريرا (1968–1990)
رحل هيلينيو هيريرا عن الإنتر، بعدما حقق 7 بطولات مع الفريق الأزرق، ويخلفه المدرب ذو النزعة الهجومية أليفريدو فوني، ليمر الفريق خلال هذه الفترة من 1968 إلى 1990 بفترة هدوء على مستوى البطولات المحلية، وفترة جفاف على صعيد البطولات الأوروبية. في 1970 تم تعيين المدرب جيوفاني إنفرنزي، الذي استطاع الفور بلقب الدوري الإيطالي للمرة الحادية عشر في تاريخه في موسم 1970-71.
مرت الأعوام الستة التي تلت الفوز باللقب سريعاً وبعيداً عن الألقاب، لم يحقق الفريق أي بطولة كبيرة وأصابت الجماهير خيبة أمل طويلة خاصة بعد خسارة فريقها لبطولة دوري أبطال أوروبا أمام نادي أياكس أمستردام في 1972, إلى أن جاء موسم 1977-78, عندما فاز الإنتر بلقب كأس إيطاليا للمرة الثانية في تاريخه بعدما فاز على نادي نابولي بنتيجة 2-1 في مباراة سجل فيها كل من غرازيانو بيني وأليساندرو ألتوبيلي.

وفي موسم 1979-80 استطاع الفريق بقيادة هدافه أليساندرو ألتوبيلي صاحب 15 هدفاً وبوجود مجموعة من اللاعبين المميزين مثل غابرييلي أوريالي وجوزيبي بيرغومي وإيفانو بوردون وريكاردو فيري، بالفوز بلقب الدوري الإيطالي للمرة الثانية عشر في تاريخه. وفي الموسم الذي تلاه، استمر النجاح المحلي بعدما احرز الفريق اللقب الثالث له في بطولة كأس إيطاليا بعدما تغلب على نادي تورينو بنتيجة 2-1 بمجموع المبارتين، وبتوقيع كل من ألدو سيرينا وأليساندرو ألتوبيلي.

ومن ثم مر الإنتر بفترة عجاف جديدة، لم يستطع خلالها الفريق إضافة أي لقب في خزانته، لكن التعاقدات الجديدة مثل أندرياس بريمه ولوثار ماثيوس ورامون دياز وبوبجود والتر زينغا وجوزيبي باريزي وبقيادة الإيطالي جوزيبي بيرغومي، وضعت حداً لتلك الفترة، في عام موسم 1988-89 عندما فاز بالبطولة الثالثة عشر في الدوري الإيطالي بقيادة مدربه المحنك جوفاني تراباتوني وبقيادة هدافه ألدو سيرينا صاحب 22 هدفاً. ثم استطاع الفريق الفوز بإول لقب له في بطولة كأس السوبر الإيطالي عندما تغلب على بطل كأس إيطاليا آنذاك نادي سامبدوريا بنتيجة 2-0.

فترة الجفاف (1990–2004)
كانت فترة التسعينات من القرن الماضي فترة جفاف وانحسار في تاريخ النادي، حيث اكتفى الإنتر في أغلب مشاركاته بالمراكز المتوسطة في الدوري الإيطالي، وظل يشاهد الصراع الكبير الحاصل بين غريميه إيه سي ميلان ويوفنتوس على المستوي المحلي والأوروبي. ففي موسم 1993-94 انهى الإنتر الدوري بفارق نقطة وحيدة عن مراكز الهبوط للدرجة الثانية. لكن وعلى الرغم من تلك النتائج المتواضعة، استطاع الإنتر الفوز بلقب كأس الاتحاد الأوروبي لثلاث مرات أعوام 1991 ضد نادي روما و1994 أمام نادي زلازبورج النمساوي و1998 ضد نادي لاتسيو. وهذه البطولات لم تكن كافية لرد الجميل ولو جزء بسيط، منما تم دفعه من قبل رئيس النادي وقتها ماسيمو موراتي ابن أنجلو موراتي رئيس النادي في الفترة الذهبية، حيث أصيب بخيبة أمل كبيرة بعد أن صرف قرابة 500 مليون دولار في فترة رئاسته لجلب كل ماهو مميز للفريق.إضافة إلى معاناته المستمرة مع التحكيم الذي حرمه من بطولتين إيطالتين حسب رأي جماهير الإنتر.

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