الخميس، 28 نوفمبر 2019

Pussycat Dolls

The Pussycat Dolls are an American girl group and dance ensemble, founded in Los Angeles, California, by choreographer Robin Antin in 1995 as a burlesque troupe. After attracting media attention, Antin negotiated a record deal with Interscope Geffen A&M Records in 2003 turning the group into a music franchise comprising Nicole Scherzinger, Carmit Bachar, Ashley Roberts, Jessica Sutta, Melody Thornton, and Kimberly Wyatt. Overseen by Antin, Interscope, and various partners, the group was transformed into a global image and commercial brand. The Pussycat Dolls achieved worldwide success with hit singles "Don't Cha", "Buttons", "Stickwitu", and their first album PCD. However, despite their commercial success, the group was plagued by internal conflict due to the emphasis on Scherzinger, the group's lead vocalist, and the subordinate treatment of the other members. Bachar's departure from the group preceded the release of their second and final studio album Doll Domination, which contains singles "When I Grow Up", "I Hate This Part", and "Jai Ho! (You Are My Destiny)".

In 2009, they announced a minor hiatus that was later revealed to be an official break-up. The Dolls brand diversified into merchandise, reality television programs, a Las Vegas act, product endorsements, spin-off recording groups (Girlicious, Paradiso Girls, G.R.L.) and other ventures. Billboard ranked the Pussycat Dolls as the 80th most successful musical act of the 2000s.[1] The group has sold 54 million records worldwide, making them one of the best-selling girl groups of all time.[2][3] In 2012, The Pussycat Dolls ranked 100th on VH1's 100 Greatest Women in Music, and as the tenth all-girl group
History
1995–2002: Beginnings as burlesque dance troupe
Antin began exploring the idea of a modern burlesque troupe during 1990 with Carla Kama and Christina Applegate as performers.[5][6][7] The troupe began to perform in 1995, with a repertoire of 1950s and 1960s popular music standards while dressed in lingerie or old-fashioned pin-up costumes. They secured a Thursday night residency at a Los Angeles nightclub, the Viper Room, where they stayed from 1995 to 2001. They appeared briefly in the 1998 films Matters of Consequence (dancing to Mancini's "Hub Caps and Tail Lights", and Keely Smith's "When Your Lover has Gone"),[8] and The Treat (directed by Jonathan Gems).[9] From 1995 to 2003 there were numerous guest vocalists, and many changes to the dance personnel.

The troupe received wider press coverage during June 1999, when Playboy featured a Pussycat Dolls pictorial, featuring at least seven contemporary members posing semi-nude (Kasey Campbell, Kiva Dawson, Antonietta Macri, Erica Breckels, Katie Bergold, Erica Gudis and Lindsley Allen).[10] Three years later, The Pussycat Dolls moved to the Roxy. They were featured in magazines, television specials for MTV and VH1, ad campaigns, and films. Some of The Pussycat Dolls appeared in the 2003 film Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle,[5] dancing to Mancini's "The Pink Panther Theme". They were also featured in Pink's "Trouble" music video. Along with Applegate, Christina Aguilera and Carmen Electra (who was the group's lead performer for many of their shows) the troupe was featured in a Maxim magazine shoot in 2002,[11] which increased public interest in them (Aguilera later appeared in the similarly themed 2010 film Burlesque directed by Robin Antin's brother Steve).

Following their growing popularity, Interscope Geffen A&M Records music producers Jimmy Iovine and Ron Fair became involved with the group helping them to transform into a franchise after Gwen Stefani was asked to perform with the dolls.[12] The former dance troupe evolved into a popular music recording group and became employees of Iovine's label Interscope Records. The only troupe members who remained after the re-casting process were Robin Antin (taking on the creative, executive and managerial roles), Carmit Bachar, Cyia Batten, Kasey Campbell, Ashley Roberts, Jessica Sutta and Kimberly Wyatt. Electra, when asked about her lack of involvement with the group's evolution into a popular music group, said, "I was part of [the Dolls] for over two years and did every show with them [...] but financially, I couldn't become part of their new music project [...] It was a sacrifice I couldn't make."[13]

2003–2007: Recording group formation and PCD
During 2003, Antin struck a joint venture with Interscope Records to develop The Pussycat Dolls into a brand, with Jimmy Iovine assigning the project to Ron Fair.[14] Auditions followed suit, for a separate group which would not include celebrity members.[14] Singers Nicole Scherzinger, Melody Thornton and Kaya Jones[15][16] were recruited, joining Carmit Bachar, Ashley Roberts, Jessica Sutta and Kimberly Wyatt to form a new recording group.[17] In February 2004 they performed "Big Spender" live at the MTV Asia Awards.[18][19] In 2004, they recorded "We Went as Far as We Felt Like Going" for the Shark Tale soundtrack and recorded the single, "Sway" which is featured on the soundtrack of Shall We Dance?[17] Jones left the group in September 2004, while Batten and Campbell left in January 2005.

The group's debut album, PCD, was released in September 2005 and sold 3 million copies in the United States.[20] The album's lead single, "Don't Cha", was a commercial success, topping the charts worldwide,[21] and reaching number two on the Billboard Hot 100.[22] The group's second single, "Stickwitu", peaked at number five on the Billboard Hot 100 and earned a Grammy nomination for Best Pop Performance By a Duo or Group, but lost.[23] It was also the group's second consecutive number one in the United Kingdom.[24] The group became one of the top-selling artists in 2006, while the album appeared at number twelve on the Billboard 200-year-end chart that year.[25] "Beep" reached number two in the United Kingdom and number thirteen on Billboard Hot 100.[26] To date, PCD has sold over 9 million copies worldwide.[27]

The group was selected to perform for the introduction for ABC's coverage of the NBA.[28] The Pussycat Dolls first opened for the Black Eyed Peas Honda Civic Tour in North America.[29] To further promote the album, Snoop Dogg was added to a remix of "Buttons",[30] which became a worldwide hit reaching number three on the Billboard Hot 100,[31] and top five elsewhere.[32] The Pussycat Dolls embarked on their PCD World Tour with Rihanna as the opening act in the UK leg.[33] One of the dates of the PCD World Tour was recorded and streamed via MSN Music. Two final singles would be released from the album, "I Don't Need a Man" and "Wait a Minute", with the former becoming a moderate success and the latter becoming the group's fifth top 40 single on the Hot 100.[34]

To further promote the album the Pussycat Dolls toured along with Danity Kane on Christina Aguilera's Back to Basics Tour (2007) in North America from February to May.[35] The success of the group's debut album brought them a wide array of spin-offs including a CW reality series, The Pussycat Dolls Present: The Search for the Next Doll.[36] The goal of the show was to add a seventh member to join them in future endeavors. Asia Nitollano was announced as the winner on April 24, however several months later, it was revealed that Nitollano had actually quit the group shortly after the finale aired.[37] Following their performance at Live Earth, the group would only have occasional one-off performances for a while and went on a hiatus in mid-2007, during which Scherzinger attempted to launch a solo career. Plans for her debut solo album, 'Her Name is Nicole', would eventually be shelved after the release of four singles failed to make an impact on the charts. In August 2007, Sutta would be featured on the Paul van Dyke track White Lies (Paul van Dyk song), which topped the US Billboard Hot Dance Singles chart.

2008–2010: Doll Domination and disbandment
On March 3, 2008 it was announced via the group's website that Carmit Bachar had left the group, intending to pursue a solo career.[38] At the time of her departure, she had been the longest member of the group, joining in 1995 when they were a burlesque act.[39] Several days later, they performed for the first time without Bachar for the Operation MySpace concert which honored US troops stationed in Kuwait.[38] In May 2008, they released their second album's lead single "When I Grow Up",[40] which reached the top ten in 16 countries.[5] At the 2008 MTV Video Music Awards, its accompanying music video was nominated for six awards, the most of that ceremony,[41] and went on to win Best Dancing in a Video.[42] Doll Domination was released in September 2008 to mixed reviews.[43] It attained their highest peak position on the Billboard 200,[44] but failed to match the sales of its predecessor, selling less than a sixth as many as PCD sold (in the UK),[45] and regarding it as a commercial disappointment.[46] Three subsequent singles were released in 2008, "Whatcha Think About That", "Out of This Club", and "I Hate This Part";[47] the last one peaked at number 11 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.[48]

In January 2009, the Pussycat Dolls embarked on the Doll Domination Tour, their second headlining worldwide concert tour, which highlighted stops in Europe, Oceania and Asia,[49] and grossed over $14 million.[note 1] Between the first two legs, the group opened for The Circus Starring Britney Spears in North America.[51] Jessica Sutta suffered a back injury during the first Sydney show, leaving the group performing as a foursome throughout the following shows.[52] While on tour in Europe, Nicole Scherzinger was asked to re-write pop version of "Jai Ho" from the movie Slumdog Millionaire (2008).[53] The song was entitled "Jai Ho! (You Are My Destiny)" and credited Scherzinger as a featured artist. This caused internal strife within the group, and a public outburst by Melody Thornton during one of the group's appearances on tour.[54] Despite that, it became one of their most successful singles,[55] and peaked at number 15 on the Billboard Hot 100, after charging eighty-five places, making the largest weekly leap from number 100.[56] The album's final two singles, "Bottle Pop" and "Hush Hush; Hush Hush" topped the US Hot Dance/Club Songs chart.[57] Meanwhile, Doll Domination was reissued into scaled down versions in various territories; in Australia, the album was subtitled 2.0. with 10 songs and an EP subtitled The Mini Collection was released in the UK.[58][45]

After the tour's conclusion, the group went on a hiatus,[59] with Robin Antin acknowledging that new members would be joining Scherzinger.[60] By February 2010 Jessica Sutta, Ashley Roberts, Kimberly Wyatt and Melody Thornton had announced their departures from the group,[61] with Wyatt later acknowledging that "the group has fully disbanded."[62] In May 2010, four new members surrounded Scherzinger in a new line-up,[63] but by the end of the year, Scherzinger had left the group to pursue a solo career.[64] In 2011, there were continued attempts to rebuild the group, and a line-up that included former Paradiso Girls member Lauren Bennett, former Girlicious member Chrystina Sayers, future G.R.L Paula van Oppen, Vanessa Curry and Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders Erica Kiehl Jenkins was featured in a GoDaddy commercial during Super Bowl XLVI.[65] Though a new album was reportedly in the works, these members quietly went their separate ways after a few months.[66][67]

2017–present: Reunion, loss of master tapes
In October 2017, Dan Wootton of The Sun reported that Roberts, Scherzinger, Sutta, Wyatt and Thornton were considering reuniting and going on tour in 2018, but Bachar was not on board.[68] The following week, social media sites were set up, further fuelling speculation of a reunion.[69] On April 25, 2018, during an appearance on The Chris Ramsey Show, Wyatt claimed that the band could reunite before the end of 2018. "We're all just in a place where we're kind of ready to live it all again, and make it fun and enjoy it and everything," she said. "So yeah, we're looking at the possibilities."[70]

On June 25, 2019, The New York Times Magazine listed The Pussycat Dolls among hundreds of artists whose master tapes was reportedly destroyed in the 2008 Universal Studios fire. The extent of damages and losses were not known due to conflicted reports over the number of primary masters kept in storage.[71] Later in September 2019, ET, reported that Scherzinger has joined former members of their band Pussycat Dolls for new studio sessions and the band will be reuniting for a Greatest Hits tour in 2020.[72] UK The X Factor judge Louis Walsh confirmed that the Pussycat Dolls would be performing on the finale of The X Factor: Celebrity on November 30, 2019.[73] The band confirmed their reunion on British radio station Heart, confirming that Bachar, Roberts, Scherzinger, Sutta and Wyatt had been recording new music and have announced nine tour dates around the UK in 2020.[74] During the interview Scherzinger remarked that it had been around 10 years since the group's last tour and that the time felt right, "it's been a long time coming, but this feels like the perfect time to remind the world what it means to be a Pussycat Doll."[74] According to group founder Robin Antin, Thornton would not be taking part due to her feeling like the time was not right. The group have left the door open for Thornton to rejoin at a later date.[75]

Additional work
Merchandise
The Pussycat Dolls had re-recorded "Don't Cha" in Simlish (as "Do Ba") for inclusion in the computer game The Sims 2: Pets.[76] They also appeared in character form in the video game Asphalt: Urban GT 2 released in November 2006.[77] In a merchandising agreement with Interscope in 2006, toy manufacturer Hasbro planned a line of dolls modeled after the group, reportedly to be marketed to six to nine-year-olds.[78] Two organizations (Dads and Daughters and Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood) successfully lobbied Hasbro to scrap the plan,[79] saying they felt the dolls would have been inappropriate for children due to the overtly sexual nature of the Pussycat Dolls' songs, videos and performances.[80] Also in 2006, Interscope negotiated a deal with Estée Lauder for a Pussycat Dolls line of cosmetics under the Stila brand.[81] In 2008, Robin Antin and the La Senza Corporation produced a line of Burlesque Pussycat Dolls-styled lingerie called "Shhh...by Robin Antin",[82] and on December 15, Antin released Robin Antin's Pussycat Dolls Workout, which is composed of dancers from the Pussycat Doll Lounge Review including Chrystina Sayers from Girlicious, and features Nicole Scherzinger.[83]

Burlesque Lounge
Caesars Palace in Las Vegas operated a resident live show at its "Pussycat Dolls Lounge", until closing the venue in February 2015.[84] The burlesque-style show had female dancers inside a rhinestone-encrusted bathtub and on raised platforms, with female dealers, also wearing Pussycat Dolls-inspired T&A clothing, operating the blackjack and roulette tables in the venue.[84]

Controversies
Fines
In 2006, the group ran into trouble in Kuala Lumpur with the authorities for sexually explicit dancing. The performance, part of their PCD World Tour, was not well received in the Muslim state, which frowned upon the group's "eye-popping attire" and "sexually suggestive stage routines". Absolute Entertainment, the company behind the group's appearance in Malaysia, was fined $3000 for the incident.[85]

Overemphasis of Scherzinger
Margeaux Watson of Entertainment Weekly took a major swipe at the group for their overemphasis of Scherzinger as the lead singer. Watson said, "there are two kinds of girl groups: those anchored by a superstar (The Supremes, Destiny's Child), and those made up of charismatic personalities endowed with limited individual gifts (Spice Girls, TLC). The Pussycat Dolls are neither—they're a brand, not a band. This follow-up to 2005's multi-platinum PCD finds lead Doll Nicole Scherzinger in the spotlight, and she's no Beyoncé. As for the others, well... can you name them? Do you even know how many there are?"[86]

As part of a Behind the Music special on Scherzinger's career,[87] she claimed that she was responsible for singing both lead and background vocals on both of the group's studio albums, with hardly anything sung by her fellow members. Scherzinger, who said that she did not want to get in trouble for her revelations, explained that the other members did not even hear the tracks until they were finished.[88] Kaya Jones told TMZ, "Nicole was always someone who wanted to be in the spotlight and would do pretty much anything to get it. [...] To call the other girls in the Pussycat Dolls 'window dressings' is a bit farfetched... every girl in the group was talented."[89]

Alleged reasons for split
Whilst being a contestant on the twelfth season of I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here!, Ashley Roberts said, "Even in the group, I wasn't allowed to talk, we were told to be quiet. Only Nicole was allowed to talk. We would occasionally pitch in."[90] She vented her frustration about it and revealed that nothing in the group was split evenly; "Why do you think the band broke up? U2 are still together and they split everything down the middle."[90]

After disbanding
After the group's formal disbandment, all members continued on their solo projects. Carmit Bachar would join musician Sammy Jay to become electronic music duo LadyStation, releasing the EP Voices in 2015. In 2010, Kimberly Wyatt joined a musical duo called Her Majesty & the Wolves and released their debut album on July 11, 2011.[91] That same year, she was featured on the Aggro Santos song "Candy" which became a UK top five hit.[92] On June 26, 2011, Melody Thornton announced plans to have her debut solo album released sometime in 2012.[93] On March 15, 2012, she released her first mixtape, "P.O.Y.B.L",[94] and contains 10 tracks of five remakes and four originals all written by Thornton.[95] On June 3, 2011, Jessica Sutta announced that she had signed to Hollywood Records [96] and her first single, "Show Me", peaked at number one on the Hot Dance Club Songs in the United States.[97] However, her debut album "Sutta Pop" was shelved and she later left the label. Using the name J Sutta, she released the mixtape Feline Resurrection, and her debut album I Say Yes on March 3, 2017. On November 7, 2012, it was confirmed that Ashley Roberts would compete in the twelfth series of the British reality show I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here! airing on ITV.[98] In January 2013, Roberts became a member of the ice panel for the final two series of British skating show, Dancing on Ice on ITV.[99] In June 2014, Roberts announced her debut album, titled Butterfly Effect, would be released on September 1, 2014.[100]

Lead member Nicole Scherzinger continued her solo career after a halt to release the group's second and final studio album. In March 2010, it was announced that Scherzinger would be a celebrity contestant on the tenth season of Dancing with the Stars, partnering with Derek Hough,[101] which she won.[102] In March 2011, Scherzinger released her debut studio album, Killer Love, and experienced moderate success in certain territories.[103] The album included second single, "Don't Hold Your Breath" which debuted atop the UK Singles Chart.[104] The album's third single, "Right There", was remixed featuring 50 Cent and released as the lead single for the US version of Killer Love.[105] It peaked at number thirty-nine on the Billboard Hot 100,[106] and reached the top ten in countries such as Australia, Ireland, New Zealand, Romania, Scotland and the United Kingdom.[107] In May 2011, Scherzinger was hired as a judge on the first season of the American version of The X Factor,[108] alongside Simon Cowell, Paula Abdul and L.A. Reid.[109] After her stint in the United States, Scherzinger joined The X Factor UK for its ninth series as the fourth permanent judge.[110] In May 2013, Scherzinger was confirmed as a returning judge for the tenth series of The X Factor UK.[111] In January 2014, it was reported that Scherzinger left Interscope Records and signed a multimillion-dollar recording deal with Sony Records.[112] Scherzinger's album, titled Big Fat Lie, was released in October 2014.

Legacy
With only two studio albums, the band became the best selling girl group of the 2000s,[27] digital era,[113] and fourth of all time.[114] Since the group's formation in 2003, the Pussycat Dolls have sold 54 million records worldwide.[3] VH1 included the Pussycat Dolls one of the 100 Greatest Women in Music in 2012.[115] Billboard also ranked the group as one of the best selling acts of the 2000−09 decade.[116] The Pussycat Dolls are one of the best-selling girl groups of all time. James Montgomery of MTV commented that the success of the group's debut album PCD made the Dolls "the heirs to the Spice Girls' bedazzled throne".[117] PCD has sold over 1,246,769 copies in the United Kingdom, making it the best selling American girl group release there,[118] also becoming one of the best selling albums of the 2000–09 decade.[119] The success of the group's debut album led them to become the most successful girl group in the world since the Spice Girls in the late 1990s.[120]

The Pussycat Dolls have a string of hit singles − "Don't Cha" has sold more than 3 million copies in the United States – becoming the best-selling song of all time by a female group in the United States,[121] and 6 million worldwide, becoming one of the best-selling singles of all time.[122] It was included on VH1's list of Greatest Songs of '00s.[123] The Official Charts Company listed "Don't Cha" and "Jai Ho! (You Are My Destiny)" at number five and thirty-nine, as of the most downloaded song since its launch, respectively.[124] The latter created a milestone for Billboard Hot 100 with a biggest single-week upward movement in the lifetime of the chart.[125] "Jai Ho! (You are My Destiny)" and "Don't Cha" are two of the best-selling songs in Australia and in the United Kingdom as of July 2009.[126][failed verification] "Don't Cha" was also featured in VH1's I Love the 2000s.[127] The music video for "Don't Cha" is noted for being "iconic" among girl groups.[128] Andrew Unterberger of Billboard said, "It was inevitable that the song and video would become massive, and become massive they did, with the song heating up the Hot 100 chart and the video establishing the group as mainstays on MTV for many subsequent (though not quite as memorable) videos to come."[128] "Buttons" is also regarded as one of the sexiest videos ever by media outlets AOL Music,[129] MuchMusic,[130][131] Fuse,[132] and VH1.[133] With "Buttons" surpassing 2 million digital downloads, the Pussycat Dolls became the first all-female group in digital history to have three singles—along with "Don't Cha" and "When I Grow Up"—pass the two million mark in digital sales.[134]

Spin-offs
A second season of Pussycat Dolls Present commenced as Pussycat Dolls Present: Girlicious which tried to find women to become part of a new three member all-female group, Girlicious.[135] Interscope Records formed a London-based spin-off group called Paradiso Girls through an open audition. In 2010, they were dropped and further promotion of their planned debut album Crazy Horse was cancelled, disestablishing the group.[136] Throughout 2011 and 2012 Antin spoke of casting new members for the Pussycat Dolls, with various new members named. In February 2013, Antin announced that she had scrapped plans for the new line-up to replace the former members of the Pussycat Dolls and would instead form a new group who will be the "next generation".[137] They eventually became known as G.R.L. and released their debut single, "Vacation", on June 16 as a B-side track to pop singer Britney Spears' single "Ooh La La"

Rangers

Rangers Football Club is a Scottish professional football club based in the Govan district of Glasgow. It has played in the Scottish Premiership, the first tier of the Scottish Professional Football League, since winning the 2015–16 Scottish Championship. Their home ground, Ibrox Stadium, in the southwest of the city, is the third largest football stadium in the country. Although not part of the official name, the club is occasionally referred to as Glasgow Rangers.[2] Rangers have played in blue shirts since the inception of the club.[3]

Rangers have won more league titles and domestic trebles than any other club in the world, winning the league title 54 times, the Scottish Cup 33 times and the Scottish League Cup 27 times, and achieving the treble of all three in the same season seven times. Rangers won the European Cup Winners' Cup in 1972 after being losing finalists twice, in 1961 (the first British club to reach a UEFA tournament final) and 1967. A third runners-up finish in Europe came in the UEFA Cup in 2008. Rangers have a long-standing rivalry with Celtic, the two Glasgow clubs being collectively known as the Old Firm, which is considered one of the world's biggest football derbies.[4][5]

Founded in February 1872, Rangers was one of the 11 original members of the Scottish Football League[6] and it remained in the top division continuously until a financial crisis during the 2011–12 season saw an administration event occur and the original company liquidated[7][8] with the assets moved to a new company structure.[9] The club was accepted as an associate member of the Scottish Football League and placed in the fourth tier of Scottish football league system in time for the start of the following season. Rangers then won three promotions in four years, returning to the Premiership for the start of the 2016–17 season.
Rangers were formed by four founders – brothers Moses McNeil and Peter McNeil, Peter Campbell and William McBeath – who met at West End Park (now known as Kelvingrove Park) in February 1872. Rangers' first match, in May that year, was a goalless friendly draw with Callander on Glasgow Green. David Hill was also a founder member.[10] In 1873, the club held its first annual meeting and staff were elected.[11][12] By 1876 Rangers had its first international player, with Moses McNeil representing Scotland in a match against Wales.[13] In 1877 Rangers reached the Scottish Cup final; after drawing the first game, Rangers refused to turn up for the replay and the cup was awarded to Vale of Leven. Rangers won the Glasgow Merchants' Charity Cup the following year against Vale of Leven 2–1, their first major cup.[14] The first-ever Old Firm match took place in 1888, the year of Celtic's establishment. Rangers lost 5–2 in a friendly to a team composed largely of guest players from Hibernian
Rangers, by then playing at the first Ibrox Stadium, were one of ten original members. The club's first-ever league match, on 16 August 1890, resulted in a 5–2 victory over Heart of Midlothian. After finishing joint-top with Dumbarton, a play-off held at Cathkin Park finished 2–2 and the title was shared for the only time in its history. Rangers' first-ever Scottish Cup win came in 1894 after a 3–1 final victory over rivals Celtic. By the start of the 20th century, Rangers had won two league titles and three Scottish Cups.[12][14][18][19] During William Wilton's time as match secretary and then team manager, Rangers won 10 league titles.

Bill Struth and Scot Symon
Taking over as manager after William Wilton's tragic death in 1920, Bill Struth was Rangers' most successful manager, guiding the club to 14 league titles before the onset of the Second World War. On 2 January 1939 a British league attendance record was broken as 118,567 fans turned out to watch Rangers beat Celtic in the traditional New Year's Day Old Firm match.[20] Leading the club for 34 years until 1954, Struth won more trophies than any manager in Scottish Football history, amassing 18 league championships, 10 Scottish Cups, two League Cups, seven war-time championships, 19 Glasgow Cups, 17 Glasgow Merchant Charity Cups and other war-time honours.[11][21] During the wartime regional league setup, Rangers achieved their highest score against old firm rivals Celtic with an 8–1 win in the Southern Football League.[22]

Scot Symon continued Struth's success, winning six league championships, five Scottish Cups and four League Cups, becoming the second manager to win the domestic treble in 1963–64 season, the era of 'Slim' Jim Baxter, one of the club's greatest players.[23][24] Rangers also lost by their biggest Old Firm margin of 7–1.[22]

Rangers reached the semi-finals of the European Cup in 1960, losing to German club Eintracht Frankfurt by a record aggregate 12–4 for a Scottish team.[25] In 1961 Rangers became the first British team to reach a European final when they contested the Cup Winners' Cup final against Italian side Fiorentina, only to lose 4–1 on aggregate.[26] Rangers lost again in the final of the same competition in 1967, by a single goal after extra time to Bayern Munich.[19]

Ibrox disaster, European success and Jock Wallace
The Ibrox disaster occurred on 2 January 1971 when large-scale crushing on a stairway exit at the culmination of an Old Firm game claimed 66 lives. An enquiry concluded that the crush was likely to have happened 10 minutes after the final whistle and to have been triggered by someone falling on the stairs.[27] A benefit match to raise funds for the victims' families took place after the disaster, a joint Rangers and Celtic team playing a Scotland XI at Hampden, watched by 81,405 fans.[28]

In 1972, Rangers emerged from the tragedy of the previous year to finally achieve success on the European stage. A Colin Stein goal and a Willie Johnston double helped secure a 3–2 victory over Dynamo Moscow at the Nou Camp, Barcelona, to lift the European Cup Winners' Cup. Captain John Greig received the trophy in a small room within the Nou Camp following pitch invasions by Rangers fans reacting to the heavy handed tactics of the Spanish police, the majority of whom had been brought in from outwith Catalonia.[29] Rangers were banned from Europe for two years for the behaviour of their fans, later reduced on appeal to one year.[30]

The following season saw the club compete in the first ever European Super Cup, although the European ban saw it officially recognised as Rangers centenary anniversary match. The side played the European Cup holders Ajax, who had first proposed the idea, in January 1973. The Dutch side proved too strong and recorded a 6–3 aggregate win, with Rangers losing 1–3 at Ibrox and 3–2 in Amsterdam.[31]

Emerging from the shadows of Jock Stein's Celtic side, Rangers regained ascendancy with notable domestic success under the stewardship of manager Jock Wallace. In his first season in charge – the club's centenary – Rangers won the Scottish Cup at Hampden in front of 122,714 supporters.[32] In 1974–75, Wallace led Rangers to their first League championship triumph in 11 years, before winning the treble the following season, repeating the historic feat in 1977–78.[33]

John Greig served as manager for five years but was unable to achieve the success as a manager that he had as a player. Unable to win the league during his reign, he was replaced by Wallace returning in 1983. Wallace was unable to repeat the success of his first period in charge with a win ratio of less than 50%, and was himself replaced by Graeme Souness in 1986.

Graeme Souness, Walter Smith and 9 in a row
Every year from the 1988–89 season until the 1996–97 season, Rangers won the league title. This nine-in-a-row achievement equalled Celtic's record, set prior to the forming of the Scottish Football League Premier Division, subsequent to which competing teams met four times a season. The first three of these seasons the club was managed by Graeme Souness; the latter six under the stewardship of Walter Smith.[34][35]

Notable seasons included 1990–91, which culminated in a last-day finale, Rangers securing a 2–0 victory at Ibrox over Aberdeen, who needed only a draw to secure the championship. Season 1992–93 was notable for a domestic treble of trophies, as well an extended run in the inaugural UEFA Champions League, the club at one stage only one goal from securing a place in the final.[36]

Rangers' ninth consecutive championship title was secured at Tannadice Park on 7 May 1997, with a single-goal victory over Dundee United.[37]

Dick Advocaat, Alex McLeish and Paul Le Guen
In 1998, Dutchman Dick Advocaat became the club's first foreign manager.[38] Nine-in-a-row era stalwarts having moved on, Advocaat invested heavily in the team with immediate results, leading the club to their sixth domestic treble. The league championship was won with a 3–0 victory at Celtic Park on 2 May 1999.[39] A second-consecutive league title was won by a record 21-point margin,[40] the club securing a domestic double with a 4–0 Scottish Cup final victory over Aberdeen. Rangers' campaign in the Champions League saw them defeat UEFA Cup winners Parma en route.[41][42]

Advocaat's third season saw Rangers fail to compete domestically against Celtic under new manager Martin O'Neill. Despite investment in the team, including Tore Andre Flo for a club-record £12 million,[43] European success beyond the Champions League group stages again proved elusive.[44] After a slow start to the following season, Advocaat resigned from his post in December 2001 and was replaced by Alex McLeish.[45]

In his first full campaign, the 2002–03 season saw McLeish become the sixth Rangers manager to deliver a domestic treble.[46] The championship was won on goal difference during a dramatic final day 6–1 triumph over Dunfermline Athletic at Ibrox,[47] securing Rangers' 50th league title, the first club in the world to achieve the feat.[48] Major expenditure sanctioned by chairman David Murray had burdened Rangers with considerable debts in the region of £52m.[49] The club's worsening financial state saw many of the team's top players leave in the summer of 2003, the following season failing to deliver any trophies, only the second such occasion since 1985–86.[50]

The 2004–05 season restored success to Rangers, who were boosted by signings such as Jean-Alain Boumsong,[51] Dado Pršo[52] and Nacho Novo,[53] along with the return of former captain Barry Ferguson after a spell in England with Blackburn Rovers.[54] The club's league championship triumph culminated in a dramatic final-day finish. The destination of the trophy changed unexpectedly, with Celtic conceding late goals to Motherwell at Fir Park whilst Rangers led against Hibernian, requiring the helicopter carrying the SPL trophy to change direction and deliver the prize to the Easter Road ground in Leith.[55][56]

Despite beginning as favourites to retain the championship, Rangers suffered an unprecedented run of poor results between September and November, a club-record run of ten games without a win. Included within this period, a 1–1 draw with Inter Milan took Rangers into the last 16 of the Champions League, the first Scottish team to achieve the feat since 1993,[57] the club eventually exiting on the away goals rule to Villarreal.[58] On 9 February 2006, it was announced by David Murray that McLeish would be standing down as manager at the end of that season.[59]
Frenchman Paul Le Guen replaced Alex McLeish as manager after season 2005–06.[60] The season started with an early exit from the League Cup[61] whilst Celtic built a commanding lead at the top of the table.[62] In the UEFA Cup, Rangers became the first Scottish side to qualify for the last 32 of the competition, since the introduction of the group phase, after finishing their group unbeaten.[63] However, amid claims of disharmony between the manager and captain Barry Ferguson,[64] it was announced on 4 January 2007 that Le Guen had left Rangers by mutual consent.[65]

Walter Smith's return and Ally McCoist
On 10 January 2007, former boss Walter Smith resigned from his post as Scotland manager to return to the Ibrox helm, with Ally McCoist as assistant manager
The following season Rangers contested the UEFA Cup after dropping into the competition from the Champions League.[67] The club reached the final, defeating Panathinaikos, Werder Bremen, Sporting Lisbon and Fiorentina along the way.[68] The final in Manchester against Zenit St. Petersburg, who were managed by former Rangers manager Dick Advocaat,[69] ended in a 2–0 defeat.[70] An estimated 200,000 supporters[71] travelled to Manchester for the event,[72] and some disorder occurred.

The 2008–09 season saw Rangers recover from an early exit from the UEFA Champions League to FBK Kaunas of Lithuania.[73] The club secured its 52nd league championship on the last day of the season with a 3–0 victory at Dundee United.[74] Rangers also successfully defended the Scottish Cup, a 33rd competition triumph, defeating Falkirk 1–0 in the final.[75]

The 2009–10 season saw Rangers reach their fifth consecutive domestic final: against St Mirren in the Scottish League Cup, the club overcame a two-men deficit from red cards, a late deciding goal from Kenny Miller securing a record 27th victory in the competition.[76] The league championship title was retained, with three matches remaining, at Easter Road, defeating Hibernian 1–0 with a Kyle Lafferty goal. The 2010–11 season, Smith's final season in charge, saw Rangers retain the League Cup, defeating Celtic at Hampden with a Nikica Jelavić goal in extra time.[77] A third consecutive title was won by beating Kilmarnock 5–1 on the last day of the season, Smith's final match in charge of the club.[78]

Ally McCoist took over from Walter Smith in June 2011 but season 2011–12 started with Rangers eliminated from two European competitions before the end of August: losing to Swedish side Malmö FF in the Champions League third round qualifying match,[79] and to Slovenian side Maribor in a Europa League qualifying match.[80] While good league form saw Rangers in top spot after being unbeaten for the first 15 games, they were knocked out of the League Cup by Falkirk[81] and the Scottish Cup by Dundee Utd at Ibrox.[82] Rangers were placed into administration on 14 February 2012 resulting in the club being deducted 10 points as per SPL rules.[83] Though Rangers avoided having Celtic win the championship at Ibrox on 25 March by winning the game 3–2, Rangers ultimately finished 20 points behind Celtic in second place.[84]

Insolvency and the lower leagues
On 1 June 2012, after four months in administration, a failure to reach a CVA agreement with creditors led to The Rangers Football Club plc (since renamed RFC 2012 plc)[85] entering the process of liquidation.[86] The administrators completed a sale of the business and assets to a new company, Sevco Scotland Ltd (which later renamed itself The Rangers Football Club Ltd), though most first-team players refused to transfer across.[87][88] The new company failed to secure the transfer of Rangers' previous place in the Scottish Premier League,[89] but were later accepted into the Scottish Football League. Rangers were awarded associate membership and placed in the lowest division, the Third, rather than the First Division as the SPL and SFA had sought.[90] The transfer of Rangers' SFA membership was agreed by the SFA upon acceptance of a number of conditions, including a one-year transfer ban, in time for the club to begin the 2012–13 season.[91]

With most key Rangers players having refused to transfer to the new company, a very different Rangers team lined up for the first league match in Third Division though it secured a comfortable 5–1 victory over East Stirlingshire in front of a crowd of 49,118, a world record for a football match in a fourth tier league.[92][n 1] Away from home, Rangers started their league campaign with three successive draws before losing 1–0 to Stirling Albion, at the time the bottom club in the country.[94] Rangers were defeated in the third round of the Scottish Challenge Cup by Queen of the South at Ibrox,[95] in the quarter-finals of the Scottish League Cup at home to Inverness Caledonian Thistle[96] and in the fifth round of the Scottish Cup by Dundee United.[97] Rangers beat their own new record against Queens Park with an attendance of 49,463[98] and again against Stirling Albion with an attendance of 49,913.[99] Rangers clinched the Third Division title on 30 March after a goalless draw at Montrose.

Apart from being defeated 2–1 by Forfar Athletic in the first round of the League Cup on 3 August, season 2013–14 got off to an excellent start with Rangers winning maximum league points in their first 15 games in League One, before being held to a draw at home by Stranraer on Boxing Day 2013. Rangers secured the League One title and promotion to Scottish football's second tier on 12 March 2014 and went on to end the season unbeaten in league football.[100] Rangers also reached the final of the Scottish Challenge Cup, in which they lost to Raith Rovers[101] and the semi-final of the Scottish Cup, in which they lost 3–1 at Ibrox to Dundee United.

Playing in the Scottish Championship in season 2014–15 provided Rangers with a more difficult challenge, with the club losing home and away to both Hibernian[102][103] and Hearts[104][105] and also losing away to Queen of the South[106] in the first half of the season. Rangers also failed to beat Alloa either home or away in the league before losing 3–2 to Alloa in the semi-final of the Scottish Challenge Cup.[107] Amid mounting criticism,[108] McCoist submitted his resignation intending to honour his 12 months notice period but was placed on 'gardening leave' and replaced by Kenny McDowall on a caretaker basis.[109] McDowall remained in charge for just three months before resigning in March 2015. During his time in charge, Rangers won just three matches. Rangers then named former player Stuart McCall as their third manager of the season for the remaining fixtures.[110] Under McCall, Rangers finished third in the league and then reached the Premiership play-off final, which they lost 6–1 on aggregate to Motherwell.[111]

Warburton, Premiership Return, Caixinha and Murty
In June 2015 it was announced that Mark Warburton had been appointed manager on a three-year deal.[112] Rangers went on to win the 2015–16 Scottish Championship and automatic promotion to the Scottish Premiership, ending their four-year stint in the lower divisions. The club also reached the 2016 Scottish Cup Final, beating Old Firm rivals Celtic in the semi-final at Hampden,[113] before losing to Hibernian in the final.[114] After a poor first half of the 2016–17 season, Mark Warburton and David Weir left Rangers on 10 February 2017, and Graeme Murty was placed in caretaker control of the Rangers first team.[115][116] Pedro Caixinha eventually took over as permanent manager.

Caixinha's first full season started with Rangers suffering one of the worst results in their history. After winning 1-0 at Ibrox, Rangers lost 2–0 to Luxembourg minnows Progrès Niederkorn, resulting in Rangers being knocked out 2–1 on aggregate in the first qualifying round of the 2017–18 Europa League. Progrès had never before won a tie and had only ever scored once before in European competition.[117] After that disappointing start to the season the form did not improve, with notable results including a 2–0 reverse to Celtic at home in the league[118] and defeat to Motherwell in the Scottish League Cup semi-final by the same scoreline.[119] On 26 October, a day after a 95th-minute equaliser at Ibrox by last-placed Kilmarnock saw Rangers draw 1–1, Caixinha was sacked and Graeme Murty took over as caretaker manager again. The Portuguese manager's reign was described as "a desperate mess from start to finish".[120]

In late December, after a search for a more experienced manager proved unsuccessful, including a failed attempt to appoint Aberdeen manager Derek McInnes, Murty (who had won back-to-back games over Aberdeen[121][122] and also defeated Hibernian away from home[123] during his interim spell) was appointed to the role until the end of the season.[124] On 1 May 2018, Murty's second spell in charge ended prematurely when he was sacked as manager following a 5–0 defeat to Celtic which resulted in Celtic winning their 7th consecutive league title.[125] Rangers again ended the season in 3rd place, behind Celtic and Aberdeen for the second year in a row.[126]

The Gerrard era
On 4 May 2018, former Liverpool and England captain Steven Gerrard was confirmed as the new manager of Rangers on a four-year contract.[127] Gerrard's era started successfully with Rangers remaining unbeaten in their first 12 games under Gerrard, clinching a place in the Europa League group stage in the process.[128] However, Rangers were then defeated by Celtic in the first Old Firm match of the season,[129] and the following month were eliminated from the League Cup by Aberdeen.[130] On 29 December, Rangers defeated Celtic at Ibrox to inflict Brendan Rodgers' first defeat in 13 Old Firm games; Rangers first win over Celtic since a Scottish Cup victory in April 2016 and their first league win over Celtic since March 2012.[131] Aberdeen knocked Rangers out of a cup for the second time in the season after securing a 2–0 victory in the Scottish Cup at Ibrox on 12 March 2019.[132]

Season 2019–20 began with Rangers again qualifying for the Europa League group stage before losing 2–0 to Celtic at Ibrox in the first Old Firm match of the season on 1 September. The following day, the club signed Ryan Kent from Liverpool for £7m, [133]though the winger suffered a hamstring injury in his first appearance on 14 September 2019.[134]

Crest and colours
Crest
Unusually for a football club, Rangers have two different official crests. Today the original scroll crest appears on the club's strips whereas the lion rampant club crest is used by the media, on club merchandise and on official club documents. Both crests have undergone minor variations since their introduction. It is believed that the scroll crest, representing the letters RFC overlapping, has been used since the club's formation in 1872, although the oldest remaining piece of memorabilia containing this crest is from the 1881–82 season. The scroll crest was replaced in 1959 with the lion rampant club crest which featured a lion rampant, an old-style football and the club's motto Ready, which was shortened from Aye Ready (meaning Always Ready in Scots), all surrounded by the team name, Rangers Football Club. The lion rampant club crest was modernised in 1968; the lion rampant, team name, club motto and old style football all remained. It was again updated slightly in the early 1990s to the current version. The modern circular crest is regularly used on club merchandise and by the media; it has never featured prominently on the club strip. In 1968 the scroll crest made a return appearing on the chest of the club shirt for the first time while the modernised club crest was still the club's official logo. The scroll crest first appeared on the teams shorts for the start of the 1978–79 season

ميليسا بينويست

ميليسا ماري بينويست (بالفرنسية: Melissa Marie Benoist)‏ ( نطق فرنسي: [bənwa] ) ولدت في 4 أكتوبر 1988 هي ممثلة و‌مغنية أمريكية من أصول كندية  ، أشتهرت بتجسيدها لشخصية كارا زور إل في سلسلة دراما الأبطال الخارقين سوبرغيرل الذي يعرض على قناة سي بي إس، وتجسيدها أيضا لشخصية مارلي روز في المسلسل الكوميدي غلي ظهرت شخصية مارلي روز في الجزء الرابع والخامس من مسلسل الكوميديا الموسيقية الاستعراضية غلي من إنتاج شبكة فوكس. وشاركت بينويست في عدة مسلسلات تلفزيونية منها أرض الوطن، وذا غود وايف، والقانون والنظام: الوحدة الخاصة للضحايا. وقد شاركت في عدة أفلام مثل ويبلاش - داني كولينس - أطول رحلة - يوم الوطنيين
الحياة المبكرة
ولدت ميليسا بينويست في ليتلتون, كولورادو. هي ابنة جوليا رينيه وجيمس لوغان بينويست. ميليسا لديها أختين شقيقتين هما، جيسيكا وكريستينا. لدى ميليسا خمسة أخوة من أبيها هم، تانر واستيلا وكوكو وروكيت وأخيراَ تور. تخرجت ميليسا بينويست من مدرسة أراباهو الثانوية في سينتينيال, كولورادو في عام 2007, ومن كلية ماري ماونت مانهاتن في نيويورك سيتي في عام 2011.

الظهور الإعلامي
ميليسا بينويست والممثل في مسلسل غلي (مسلسل) دارين كريس مع الممثل جوش دوهامل في إفتتاج جوائز اختيار الأطفال نكلوديون 2013. كان من المقرر أن تكون بينويست مقدمة لحفل جوائز بيبول تشويس الثاني والأربعون، الذي عرض في 6 (عدد)، يناير 2016 على قناة سي بي إس. أختيرت إيضا لتكون سفيرة منتج بي 10 300 مل كوكا ميزوم. في يونيو 2013، طارت بينويست إلى مانيلا،الفلبين لتسويق المنتج من خلال زيارة مجمعات مختلفة للقاء مع المعجبين.

الحياة الشخصية
تزوجت ميليسا بينويست زميلها في مسلسل غلي (مسلسل) بليك جينر في مارس 2015. في سبتمبر 2014، سربت صور عارية لبينويست بعد تم إختراقها. ردت بينويست برابط لي حديث تيد على كليك بيت، وقالت في حسابها في تويتر أن "هذه قلة أدب وينبغي أن لا تدعم".

Melissa Benoist

Melissa Marie Benoist (/bəˈnɔɪst/; French: [bənwa]; born October 4, 1988)[2][3][4] is an American actress and singer. She has performed on stage and in television and film. She is known for her portrayal of the titular character in the CBS/CW DC Comics–based superhero drama series Supergirl (2015–present).

Benoist rose to prominence for her portrayal of Marley Rose on the Fox musical comedy-drama television series Glee (2013–14). She appeared in films such as Whiplash (2014), Danny Collins (2015), The Longest Ride (2015), Patriots Day (2016), Lowriders (2016), and Sun Dogs (2017), and she portrayed David Koresh's wife Rachel Jones in the miniseries Waco (2018).

On stage, Benoist made her Broadway debut in 2018 as Carole King in the jukebox musical Beautiful: The Carole King Musical.
Early life and education
Benoist was born in Houston, Texas, the daughter of Julie and Jim Benoist, a physician.[1][5] They divorced when she was young.[6] Her paternal great-grandfather was of French descent.[7] She has two biological sisters: Jessica, a novelist, and Kristina, an ecological scientist, and five half-siblings from her father's remarriage.[5][8][9][10] She was raised mostly by her mother in the suburbs of Denver, Colorado, after her parents' separation.[11]

She started dance classes at the age of three, focusing on jazz, ballet, and tap.[12][13] When she was four years old, her aunt put her in a church play she was directing;[1] after that, she began doing community children's theatre in her hometown.[14]

As a teenager, Benoist performed anonymously at Disneyland in various medleys of musical songs for three summers with the Academy of Theatre Arts, a musical theatre school she was attending, located in Littleton, Colorado, run by Paul Dwyer and Alann Worley.[15] She performed locally in a number of theatrical productions, including A Month in the Country, Cinderella, A Chorus Line, and Bye Bye Birdie at the Town Hall Arts Center, a professional theatre located in the Denver metro area. Instead of attending high school graduation parties, she performed the play Evita with other cast members at the former Country Dinner Playhouse.[15][16]

In 2006, The Denver Post named Benoist one of Colorado's five "Can't Miss Kids".[9] She graduated from Arapahoe High School in Centennial, Colorado, in 2007,[17] and then she moved to New York City to pursue a career in musical theatre.[18] She initially attended Marymount Manhattan College for the BFA musical theatre program but in her sophomore year, she switched majors to straight theatre, due to her admiration for 19th-century Russian plays.[1] She graduated from Marymount Manhattan College with a Bachelor of Arts in Theatre Arts in 2011.[19][20] While attending Marymount Manhattan college, she played the titular characters Millie Dilmount in an urban off-off-Broadway production of Thoroughly Modern Millie and Rosalind in As You Like It at the Theresa Lang Theatre.[15][9][21]

Career
2008–2011: Early work
Benoist's first film was in Tennessee in 2008 along with singer Mariah Carey.[22] Afterwards, she made guest appearances on shows like Law & Order: Criminal Intent, Blue Bloods and The Good Wife, while attending college. She played Kelly in the 2011 Goodspeed Musicals theatrical production of The Unauthorized Autobiography of Samantha Brown by Brian Lowdermilk and Kait Kerrigan at the Norma Terris Theatre.[23]

2012–2014: Rise to prominence with Glee and film roles
In May 2012, she auditioned for the musical comedy-drama series Glee in New York at the Roundabout Theatre Company, singing a different song for each of her five auditions including: "Fidelity" by Regina Spektor, "King of Anything" by Sara Bareilles, a Colbie Caillat song, and several musical theatre pieces. In July,[24] she had two screen tests in California for series creator/writer, Ryan Murphy, the casting directors, and executive producers. She portrayed Marley Rose on the fourth and fifth seasons of Glee. Her first appearance as Marley Rose was in the first episode of season four, titled "The New Rachel". Because the creators had been looking for Marley for a long time, she started working the day she found out she got the job.[6] Benoist's first performance was a duet of "New York State of Mind" with Lea Michele, during the first episode of season 4. The cover of the song reached twenty-four on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart.[25] She and Glee co-star Darren Criss appeared with Josh Duhamel in the opening of the 2013 Kids' Choice Awards.[26] That same year, she was selected as an ambassador for Coca-Cola's new product, P10 300 mL Coke Mismo.[27][28] In June 2013, they were flown to Manila, Philippines, to endorse the product by visiting various malls and meeting with fans.[29][30] She left the series Glee in early 2014, along with several other actors.[31][32][33][34]

In the summer of 2013, Benoist and Blake Jenner held a Kickstarter campaign to help fund the production of their feature film Billy Boy. The project reached its $100,000 goal.[35]

Benoist played Nicole, the love interest of Miles Teller's Andrew Neiman, in the 2014 independent drama film Whiplash,[36] which won top prizes (Grand Jury and Audience awards) at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival. In June 2014, she joined Nicholas Sparks' film adaption The Longest Ride as Marcia.[37]

She had a role in the 2015 film Danny Collins, starring Al Pacino. She played the part of Jamie, a desk clerk at a hotel frequented by one of Jamie's all-time favorite rock stars.[38] That same year, Benoist also played Becky Thatcher in Band of Robbers, the Nee Brothers's modern-day retelling of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. In May 2015, it was announced that Benoist would be playing Lorelai in the film Low Riders, replacing Lily Collins and Nicola Peltz, who were in talks for the role previously.[39] In August of that year, she landed the leading role in the Screen Gems drama feature film Oxford, with Sam Heughan as her leading man.[40]

2015–present: Supergirl and Broadway debut
In October 2015, the superhero adventure series Supergirl, with Benoist in the lead role of Kara Zor-El, premiered on CBS.[41][42][43] She became the first woman to lead a prime time superhero TV series since Wonder Woman went off the air in 1979.[44] The premiere was watched by 12.96 million viewers and received a full season order by CBS on November 30, 2015. She was reportedly the first actress looked at for the role.[41] Benoist generally received positive reviews for her portrayal of Kara Zor-El.[45] The series later moved to The CW before its second-season premiere.[46] She reprised her role in The CW's Arrowverse crossovers "Invasion!", "Crisis on Earth-X", "Elseworlds", and "Crisis on Infinite Earths" as well as The Flash episode "Duet". She reprises her role as Earth-X's Supergirl doppelgänger Overgirl in the CW Seed animated series Freedom Fighters: The Ray.
In May 2016, Benoist was cast as Katherine Russell, the widow of deceased Boston Marathon bomber Tamerlan Tsarnaev, in Peter Berg's drama film Patriots Day.[47] In June, it was announced that she was set to start alongside Michael Angarano in the comedy-drama film Sun Dogs.[48] Also in that month, the Human Rights Campaign released a video in tribute to the victims of the 2016 Orlando gay nightclub shooting; in the video, Benoist and others told the stories of the people killed there.[49][50]

In April 2017, Benoist was cast as Rachel Koresh, the legal wife of Branch Davidian leader David Koresh in Paramount Network's miniseries Waco.[51] Benoist was featured in "The Super Duper Minecraft Musical!" which was made for Minecraft's Super Duper Graphics Pack in November.[52]

On May 7, 2018, it was announced that Benoist would be playing the titular character in the Broadway show Beautiful: The Carole King Musical at the Stephen Sondheim Theatre, which marked her Broadway debut for a limited run from June 7 through August 4, 2018.[53]

Personal life
During her first semester in college, when she was learning to ride a bike, a cab backed into her and left a visible scar above her eyebrows.[54] She also has a tattoo of a bicycle on her left foot.[55]

In 2015, Benoist suffered an injury that tore her iris. The incident caused one pupil to be permanently enlarged.[13][54] In November 2019 in an Instagram video, Benoist revealed that the injury to her iris was due to an iPhone being thrown at her during a domestic dispute, in a relationship marked by repeated domestic violence. Previously, the injury had been said to have been caused when she tripped down stairs and fell into a potted plant. She told this story on live television.[56][57] In this video, her attack timeframe equalled to her marriage with Blake Jenner. Many media outlets have placed him as her attacker.[58]

Also in 2015, it was announced that she and her Glee co-star Blake Jenner were married. Benoist commented that they had been married "longer than anybody knows", with some sources claiming that the couple actually wed the same year of their engagement in 2013.[59][60][61] In late December 2016, she filed for divorce citing "irreconcilable differences".[62] The divorce was finalized in December 2017.[63]

In October 2017, Benoist helped with Chris Wood's launch of his website "I Don't Mind" that works to put a stop to the stigma around mental illnesses, admitting that she has struggled with depression and anxiety attacks since she was 13 years old. She said that Wood's words enabled her to admit to others her own issues with depression.[64] Benoist and Wood announced their engagement on February 10, 2019,[65] and married in September 2019

عثمان ارطغرل

أَبُو المُلُوك السُّلطان الغازي فخرُ الدين قره عُثمان خان الأوَّل بن أرطُغرُل بن سُليمان شاه القايوي التُركماني (بالتُركيَّة العُثمانيَّة: أبو المُلوك غازى سُلطان عُثمان خان أول بن ارطُغرُل؛ وبالتُركيَّة المُعاصرة: Sultan Osman Gazi Han ben Ertuğrul)، ويُعرف كذلك باسم عُثمان بك (بالتُركيَّة المُعاصرة: Osman Bey) وقره عُثمان (بالتُركيَّة المُعاصرة: Kara Osman)؛ هو زعيم عشيرة قايى التُركيَّة وعامل سلاجقة الروم على إحدى إمارات الثُغور الأناضوليَّة ومُؤسس السُلالة العُثمانيَّة التي حكمت البلقان والأناضول والمشرق العربي وشمال أفريقيا طيلة 600 عام إلى أن انقضى أجلها مع إعلان قيام الجُمهوريَّة التُركيَّة سنة 1922م.

وُلد عُثمان الأوَّل سنة 656هـ المُوافقة لِسنة 1258م، للأمير أرطُغرُل الغازي، عامل سلاجقة الروم على إحدى الثُغور المُطلَّة على بحر مرمرة، وحليمة خاتون. وصُودف أن يُولد في ذات اليوم الذي غزا خلاله المغول مدينة بغداد عاصمة الدولة العبَّاسيَّة وحاضرة الخِلافة الإسلاميَّة، الأمر الذي جعل المُؤرخين العُثمانيين اللاحقين يربطون بين الحدثين بِطريقةٍ دراماتيكيَّة. تولّى عُثمان شؤون الإمارة وزعامة العشيرة بعد وفاة والده، فأخلص الولاء للسلطنة السُلجوقيَّة الروميَّة على الرُغم مما كانت تتخبَّط فيه من اضطراب وما كان يتهدَّدها من أخطار. وفي سنة 1295م شرع عُثمان بمُهاجمة الثُغور البيزنطيَّة باسم السُلطان السُلجوقي والخليفة العبَّاسي، ففتح عدَّة حُصون وقاد عشيرته إلى سواحل بحر مرمرة والبحر الأسود. وحين تغلَّب المغول على سلاجقة الروم وقضوا على دولتهم، سارع عُثمان إلى إعلان استقلاله عن السلاجقة، فكان بذلك المُؤسس الحقيقي لِدولةٍ تُركيَّةٍ كُبرى نُسبت إليه فيما بعد، فعُرفت «بالعُثمانيَّة». وظلَّ عُثمان يحكم الدولة الجديدة بصفته سُلطانًا مُستقلًّا حتَّى سنة 1326م. وفي هذه السنة فتح ابنه أورخان مدينة بورصة الواقعة على مقرُبة من بحر مرمرة، وكان عُثمان في هذه الفترة قد مرُض مرض الموت، وما لبث أن تُوفي، فنُقل جُثمانه إلى بورصة ودُفن فيها، الأمر الذي جعل للمدينة رمزيَّة كبيرة عند العُثمانيين لاحقًا. أمَّا خُلفائه وذُريَّته فقد تابعوا الحملات التي بدأ فيها حتَّى أواسط القرن السَّابع عشر الميلاديّ، مُحولين الإمارة التي وضع أُسسها إلى إمبراطوريَّة عالميَّة.

رُغم شُيوع لقب «السُلطان» أو «الپاديشاه» والتصاقه بعُثمان الأوَّل إلَّا أنَّه لم يكن سُلطانًا فعليًّا في زمانه، وإنما لُقب بذلك لاحقًا لاعتباره مُؤسس سُلالة السلاطين العُثمانيين. اشتهر عُثمان الأوَّل ببساطة العيش والملبس لِتأثره بِمُعتقدات الدراويش الصوفيَّة، وكان بعيدًا عن الترف والبذخ، فحافظ على نمط حياته كشيخٍ لِعشيرة قايى، وحافظ على التقاليد التُركيَّة القديمة التي تحكم العلاقة بين الشيخ وأفراد العشيرة، وهي تقاليد سابقة على الإسلام لم يهجرها التُرك لِعدم تعارضها مع تعاليم الشريعة الإسلاميَّة.
تُشيرُ أغلب الدراسات إلى أنَّ التُرك العُثمانيين ينتسبون إلى عشيرة قايى التُركيَّة الغُزيَّة (الأوغوزيَّة) التي دفعها تقدُّم المغول في أوائل القرن الثالث عشر الميلاديّ إلى الهرب غربًا صوب الأناضول حيثُ سكنت في منطقة تابعة لِسلطنة سلاجقة الروم. بينما تُشيرُ دراساتٍ أُخرى إلى أنَّ عشيرة قايى انتقلت قبل نحو قرنين من هذا التاريخ مع بني سُلجوق من ما وراء النهر إلى خُراسان نحو سنة 1040م وسكنت بجوار مدينة مرّو، ثُمَّ ارتحلت مُجددًا إلى الأناضول الشرقيَّة بعد سنة 1071م. انخرطت تلك العشيرة وغيرها من العشائر التُركيَّة المُرتحلة في جيش السُلطان علاءُ الدين كيقباد الثاني وواجهت معه الهُجومات الخوارزميَّة والمغوليَّة والبيزنطيَّة التي تعرَّضت لها دولته، وكانت عشيرة قايى بِزعامة قائدها أرطُغرُل بن سُليمان شاه في مُقدمة الجُيوش السُلجوقيَّة على الدوام، وقد تمَّ النصر بفضلها عدَّة مرَّات، الأمر الذي دفع السُلطان علاء الدين إلى تلقيبها بِمُقدمة السُلطان، وكافأ أرطُغرُل بأن أقطع عشيرتهُ بعض الأراضي الخصبة قُرب أنقرة، وصار لا يعتمد في حُروبه مع مُجاوريه إلَّا عليه وعلى رجاله. وكان عقب كُل انتصار يُقطعهُ أراضي جديدة ويمنحهُ أموالًا جزيلة. وظلَّ أرطُغرُل حليفًا للسلاجقة حتَّى أقطعهُ السُلطان السُلجوقي منطقة في أقصى الشمال الغربي من الأناضول على الحُدود البيزنطيَّة، في المنطقة المعروفة باسم «سُكود» حول إسكي شهر، حيثُ بدأت العشيرة هُناك حياةً جديدة. ويبدو أنَّ السُلطان السُلجوقي رغب في استغلال مواهب العشيرة العسكريَّة والكفائة القتاليَّة العالية لِأبنائها لِحراسة الحُدود مع الروم، لِذلك منح العشيرة تلك الأراضي لِصد أي هُجوم بيزنطي على بلاده وبلاد المُسلمين. وظفر أرطُغرُل بِلقب «أوچ بكي»، أي «مُحافظ الحُدود»، وكان منح هذا اللقب يتماشى مع التقاليد التي درجت عليها الحُكومة السُلجوقيَّة، وهو منح أي رئيس عشيرة، يعظم أمره ويلحق به عدد من العشائر الصغيرة، لقب مُحافظ الحُدود. غير أنَّ أرطُغرُل كان ذا أطماعٍ سياسيَّة بعيدة، فلم يقنع بِهذه المنطقة التي أقطعهُ إيَّاها السُلطان السُلجوقي، ولا باللقب الذي ظفر به، ولا بِمُهمَّة حِراسة الحُدود والمُحافظة عليها؛ بل شرع يُهاجم باسم السُلطان مُمتلكات البيزنطيين في الأناضول، فانتزع منهم عدد من القُرى والبلدات، واستطاع أن يُوسِّع أراضيه خِلال مُدَّة نصف قرن قضاها كأمير على مُقاطعة حُدوديَّة، وتُوفي في سنة 680هـ المُوافقة لِسنة 1281م، عن عُمرٍ يُناهزُ تسعين سنة.

بداياته
وُلد عُثمان الأوَّل يوم 8 صَفَر 656هـ المُوافق فيه 13 شُباط (فبراير) 1258م، وهو اليوم ذاته الذي اجتاحت فيه جحافل المغول مدينة بغداد وأمعنت تقتيلًا بأهلها ودكَّت معالم العُمران والحضارة فيها. ولا يتوافر الكثير من المصادر عن حياته الأولى، إلَّا أنَّ القلَّة المُتوافرة أغلبها يُشير إلى ولادته في مدينة سُكود التي اتخذها والده عاصمةً لِإمارته. وسبب قلَّة المعلومات المُتوافرة حول هذه المرحلة من حياته يرجع إلى أنَّ أقدم مصدر معروف عنها كُتب بعد حوالي مائة سنة من وفاته. ومن تلك المصادر: «دستان وتواريخ مُلوك آل عُثمان» تأليف شاعر وحكيم البلاط العُثماني زمن السُلطان بايزيد الأوَّل أحمد بن خِضر تاج الدين الشهير بِلقب «أحمدي» (1334- 1413م)، و«بهجةُ التواريخ» تأليف المُؤرِّخ شُكر الله (ت. 1464م)، و«تاريخ آل عُثمان» تأليف المؤرخ درويش أحمد عاشق باشا زاده (1400 - 1484م). وفي الواقع فإنَّ هذه المصادر المذكورة الباقية ليست هي نفسها النسخ الأصليَّة، بل نُسخٌ عنها أُعيدت كتابتها مرارًا بعد سنوات، لذا يُحتمل أن تكون بعض المعلومات قد سقطت منها، على أنَّ بعض المُؤرخين يقول بأنها نُسخت كما هي وبالتالي فلا فرق بينها وبين النص الأصلي. وفي الحقيقة كذلك فإنَّ المصادر العُثمانيَّة والأوروپيَّة والبيزنطيَّة لا يُمكن الاعتماد عليها كثيرًا حول أُصول عُثمان الأوَّل وبالتالي أصل عشيرته. فالسجلَّات العُثمانيَّة الأصليَّة المكتوبة والتي لا تزال باقية تعود كُلها للفترة اللاحقة على فتح القُسطنطينيَّة. كما أنَّ البيزنطيين لا يُشيرون في كتاباتهم إلى أصل العُثمانيين. أمَّا المُؤرخون الأوروپيّون الأوائل، فلم يهتموا بهذا الشعب التُركي وأُصوله إلَّا مُنذ أن بدأ يُشكِّلُ خطرًا على أوروپَّا، أي بعد وفاة عُثمان بحوالي 100 سنة أو أكثر.

يذكر الإمام أحمد بن سُليمان بن كمال باشا الحنفي (ت. 940هـ \ 1534م) مؤلِّف كتاب «تأريخ آل عُثمان» أنَّ عُثمان كان أصغر أولاد أرطُغرُل سنًا، وأنَّ ولادته كانت ببلدة سُكود التي وُلّي عليها والده، إلَّا أنه قال بأنَّ ولادته كانت سنة 652هـ، وقد حدثت في ليلةٍ بدراء (ظهر فيها البدر)، كما ذكر أنَّ والدته هي حليمة خاتون (على أنَّ البعض يُشير إلى أنها جدَّته). ويذكرُ ابن كمال أيضًا أنَّ عُثمان نشأ نشأة فتيان قبائل التُرك المُرتحلة، فتعلَّم المُصارعة والمُبارزة بالسيف في صغره، كما تعلَّم رُكوب الخيل والرمي بالنبال والصيد بالعُقبان، فكان أمهر إخوته في هذا المجال. كما تعلَّم مبادئ الدين الإسلامي، وتقرَّب من مشايخ الصُوفيَّة وتأثر بهم، وفي مُقدمتهم مُعلِّمه الشيخ «إده بالي»، فانعكس ذلك على شخصيَّته وأُسلوب حياته.
أمَّا من حيثُ النسب، فإنَّ الرواية الكلاسيكيَّة الأكثر شُيوعًا وانتشارًا تُفيد بأنَّ عُثمان هو حفيد «سُليمان شاه» الذي قضى نحبه غرقًا أثناء عُبوره نهر الفُرات بِحصانه، على أنَّ المُؤرخ التُركي يلماز أوزتونا يعتبر بأنَّ الروايات التي تنص على ذلك رواياتٌ ضعيفة، وأنَّ جد عُثمان ووالد أرطُغرُل يُدعى «گندز ألب». ويُضيف أنَّ الأرجح أن سُليمان شاه هو ذكرى باقية من اسم فاتح الأناضول سُلیمان شاه بن قُتلمش الذي أسس سُلالة سلاجقة الروم، وأنَّ الادعاء بهذا الاسم رُبما نشأ بدافع الربط بين بني عُثمان وبني سُلجوق، خاصَّةً أنَّ بني عُثمان قد ظهروا على مسرح التاريخ مُدعين أنهم الخُلفاء الشرعيّون لِبني سُلجوق. وبناءً على هذا، فإنَّ شجرة نسب عُثمان الافتراضيَّة تكون كالتالي: عُثمان بن أرطُغرُل بن گندز ألب بن قايا ألب بن گوك ألب بن صارقوق ألب بن قايى ألب، فهؤلاء كُلهم بكوات (أُمراء) عشيرة قايى المذكورين في المصادر العُثمانيَّة. ومن حيثُ شجرة الأنساب العُثمانيَّة الرسميَّة، فإنَّ عُثمان الأوَّل هو حفيد «مته» الذي يُطلق عليه التُرك اسم «أوغوز خان» (ت. 174 ق.م) في البطن السَّادس والأربعين. ومن جهةٍ أُخرى تُشير بعض المصادر العُثمانيَّة إلى نسبٍ أبعد لِعُثمان ومعلوماتٍ عن أُصول التُرك الغز هي أقرب إلى الأساطير من الحقيقة، فتقول بأنَّهم من نسل يافث بن نوح، وبأنَّ لِعُثمان شجرة أنساب تضم 52 سلفًا أو أكثر وتنتهي عند النبي نوح. وتضم هذه الشجرة گوك ألب وأوغوز خان (التي تقول بأنَّه والد گوك ألب) والغُز التُركمان، ومنهم السلاجقة الذين سيطروا على فارس والأناضول وأوقعوا بالروم هزيمةً فادحة في وقعة ملاذكرد. وبهذا تبدو ملامح بعض ما أشار إليه يلماز أوزتونا في فرضيَّته، بأنَّ بني عُثمان كانوا يُحاولون على الدوام ربط أنفسهم بالسلاجقة، والظُهور بمظهر ورثتهم. هذا ويتحدَّث المُؤرِّخ ابن إيَّاس في مُؤلَّفه حامل عنوان «بدائع الزُهُور في وقائع الدُهُور» عن أُصُول مُختلفة تمامًا لِعُثمان، يرفضها المُؤرخون المُعاصرون، ووفق هذه الرواية فإنَّ عُثمان وُلد سنة 658هـ، استنادًا إلى ما قاله بعض المُؤرخين من الذين سبقوه، وأنَّ أُصوله عربيَّة من الحجاز، وأنه كان يقطن وادي الصفراء بِالقُرب من المدينة المُنوَّرة. فلمَّا وقع الغلاء بِالمدينة خرج منها عُثمان فارًا إلى بلاد بني قرمان، فنزل بِقونية وتزيَّا بِزي أهلها وأخذ عنهم عاداتهم وتقاليدهم، ثُمَّ التحق بِخدمة الأمير علاء الدين علي بن خليل القرماني، فعظم أمره عنده ومشى على طريقتهم وتكلَّم بِالتُركيَّة، وصار لهُ أتباع كثيرة وأعوان.

اسمه
تُشيرُ جميع المصادر التاريخيَّة أنَّ أرطُغرُل أطلق على ولده الأصغر اسم «عُثمان» تيمُنًا بالخليفة الراشد الثالث عُثمان بن عفَّان، أحد الصحابة المُقربين من الرسول مُحمَّد ومن العشرة المُبشرين بالجنَّة وفق المُعتقد الإسلامي السُني تحديدًا. إلَّا أنَّ أحد المُؤرخين المُعاصرين المُتخصصين بالدراسات البيزنطيَّة، وهو الدكتور «لاوند قياپينار» يقول بأنَّ الاسم الأصلي لِمُؤسسة السُلالة العُثمانيَّة كان في الواقع «أتومان» أو «أتمان»، مُستندًا في ذلك إلى كتابات المُؤرخ الرومي جرجس پاخيمرس (1242 – ح. 1310م) الذي عاصر عهد عُثمان الأوَّل، ولم يذكر بداية اسمه بِحُروفٍ تُماثل العين العربيَّة، وأورده باللاتينيَّة على أنهُ «Ottomanus» وباليونانيَّة «Асман»، ومن تبريراته الأُخرى أنَّ والد عُثمان وإخوته وأعمامه لم يحمل أيًّا منهم أسماء عربيَّة إسلاميَّة، فلماذا يكون هو فريدًا بين أقاربه هؤلاء جميعًا؟ وقد تمَّ الرد على هذا بأنَّ هذا الادعاء غير دقيق، فجد عُثمان إن كان فعلًا يُدعى «سُليمان شاه» يُمثِّلُ أكبر دليلٍ على أنَّ التسميات العربيَّة والإسلاميَّة كانت شائعة في قبيلة قايى قبل ولادة عُثمان بزمن، كما أنَّ عُثمان نفسه أطلق على أولاده أسماءً عربيَّة إسلاميَّة وأُخرى تُركيَّة، فابنهُ البكر دُعي «علاءُ الدين» بينما دُعي ابنه الأصغر «أورخان»، مما يُفيد بأنَّهُ كان مُسلمًا ووُلد مُسلمًا. ويُضيف يلماز أوزتونا بأنَّ القصَّة التي يتداولها البعض حول أن أوَّل من اعتنق الإسلام من العشيرة هو أرطُغرُل وابنه عُثمان، هي قصَّة مُلفقة وُضعت رُبما لِإعلاء شأن العائلة.

قيام الإمارة العُثمانيَّة
خلف عُثمان أباه أرطُغرُل بعد وفاته، وتولّى زعامة الإمارة العتيدة وعشيرة قايى وهو في سن الرابعة والعشرين على الأرجح، ووفقًا لما اتفق عليه عددٌ من المُؤرخين فقد كان تولّي عُثمان للإمارة لا سلمي، فقيل أنه دخل في معركةٍ على العرش مع أقاربه لِيُزيحهم من دربه أولًا. أما ماهيَّة هذه المعركة ومع من كانت وكيف تطوَّرت فأمورٌ مُثيرةٌ للجدل ووُجدت حولها حكاياتٌ تاريخيَّةٌ اختلفت باختلاف المُؤرخين. وقد نصت أغلب الروايات على أنَّ أحد أطراف تلك المعركة كان عم عُثمان وهو «دوندار غازي»، إذ اعتبرته سائر العشائر أحق بالإمارة من ابن أخيه، فيما دعم المُحاربون والفُرسان عُثمانًا. ولا يُعرف على وجه التحديد كيف اشتعلت نيران هذه المعركة ولا كيف استمرت أو أي شكلٍ اتخذت. إلَّا أنَّ عُثمان انتصر فيها وقتل عمه العجوز برمية سهم.

ويروي السيِّد مُحمَّد بن إبراهيم الخُراساني الشهير باسم «الحاج بكطاش ولي» روايةً أُخرى في مُؤلَّفه حامل عنوان «ولايت نامه»، فقال أنَّ من تولّى إمارة القبيلة بعد وفاة أرطُغرُل كان عم عُثمان الأصغر المُسمَّى «گندز ألب»، وفي تلك الفترة كان عُثمان وفرسان القبيلة قد بدؤا بِتنظيم هجمات على الأراضي البيزنطيَّة في المناطق المجاورة لِسُكود مثل ياري حصار وبيله جك وإینه‌گول وإزنيق. وردًا على تلك الهجمات أرسل «تكفور»، وهو عامل الروم على بورصة، أرسل الرُسل إلى السُلطان السُلجوقي علاء الدين كيقباد الثالث ليشتكي من الهجمات. فردَّ السُلطان بأن أمر گندز ألب بإحضار ابن أخيه الشاب لِيمثل أمامه، فقبض عليه وأرسله إلى قونية. ووفقًا لِهذه الرواية فإنَّ السُلطان كان مُعجبًا بعُثمان وشجاعته وإقدامه، فأرسلهُ إلى الحاج بكطاش ولي الذي استقبله بحفاوة، وأمر بإطلاقه قائلًا: «أنا أنتظر مثله مُنذُ سنوات»، ولفَّ رأسه بقماشه مشايخ الصوفيَّة وصار كأنه أُلبس تاجًا، وأرسل معه إلى قونية رسالة إلى السُلطان يمتدحهُ فيها ويطلب منه إقراره على زعامة قبيلة قايى، وبعد قراءة السُلطان السُلجوقي للرسالة أقرَّ عُثمان على إمارة أبيه. ولم يرد في كتاب الحاج بكطاش أي ذكر لِعلاقة عُثمان بِگندز ألب بعد ذلك.

أهميَّة موقع الإمارة العُثمانيَّة
تحدَّد خلال عهد عُثمان الأوَّل الوضع العسكري والسياسي للتُرك العُثمانيين، وكان وضعهم الديني قد تحدَّد قبل ذلك بِفعل تأثُرهم بالدين الإسلامي الذي كان مُنتشرًا في البيئات التُركيَّة في آسيا الوُسطى والغربيَّة. إلَّا أنَّ ما ميزهم عن العديد من السُلالات الإسلاميَّة المُجاورة كان توفيقهم بين أكبر مذهبين إسلاميين، فعلى الرُغم من اعتناقهم المذهب السُني الحنفي، إلَّا أنهم أظهروا تأثُرًا ببعض جوانب المذهب الشيعي الجعفري، لأنَّ المُعتقدات السُنيَّة والشيعيَّة الاثنا عشريَّة كانتا قد كوَّنتا مزيجًا واحدًا إسلاميًّا لدى قبائل التُركمان التي ارتحلت من آسيا الوُسطى إلى الأناضول، وفي مُقدمتها سلاجقة الروم التي عمل آل عُثمان في خدمتها
أمَّا من الناحية العسكريَّة، كان لِموقع مركز عُثمان أثرٌ كبيرٌ في نجاحه. فمدينة سُكود تقع على مُرتفعٍ يسهل الدفاع عنه من جهة، وعلى الطريق الرئيسي المُمتد من القُسطنطينيَّة إلى قونية من جهةٍ أُخرى، وتكمن أهميَّة هذا المركز بِفعل التجزئة السياسيَّة لِلمنطقة التي أعطت الوحدات الصغيرة أهميَّة أكثر من ذي قبل. وأتاحت مُجاورته لِأراضي الإمبراطوريَّة البيزنطيَّة توجيه نشاطه نحو الحرب والجهاد لاستكمال رسالة السلطنة السُلجوقيَّة الروميَّة بِفتح الأراضي الروميَّة كافَّة، وإدخالها ضمن الأراضي الإسلاميَّة والخلافة العبَّاسيَّة، وشجَّعهُ على ذلك حال الضعف الذي دبَّ في جسم الإمبراطوريَّة البيزنطيَّة وأجهزتها، حيثُ أتاح لهُ ذلك سُهولة التوسُّع باتجاه غربيّ الأناضول، وفي عُبور مضيق الدردنيل إلى أوروپَّا الشرقيَّة الجنوبيَّة، أكثر ممَّا أتاح لهُ الالتفات نحو جيرانه المُسلمين، بالإضافة إلى انهماك البيزنطيين بالحُروب في أوروپَّا. إلَّا أنَّهُ على الرُغم من ذلك لا يُمكن المُبالغة في تراجع القُوَّة البيزنطيَّة في هذه المنطقة، إذ قام البيزنطيّون خلال عهد كُلٌ من ميخائيل الثامن وأندرونيقوس الثاني (681 - 728هـ \ 1282 - 1328م) بِتحصين حُدود منطقة بيثينيا لِصدِّ الغزوات الإسلاميَّة التي كان عليها أن تقطع نهر صقارية إلى مُدن هذه المُقاطعة، لكنَّ هذه التحصينات كانت عديمة الفائدة أمام التحرُّك العُثماني على طول مجرى النهر، من الجنوب إلى الشمال والغرب. يُضاف إلى ذلك، فقد وصلت كُلٌّ من السلطنة السُلجوقيَّة والإمبراطوريَّة البيزنطيَّة إلى حال إعياءٍ شديد نتيجة الصراع الطويل بينهما، وتعرُّض الدولة الأولى لِلغزو المغولي، والدولة الثانية لِلغزو اللاتيني خلال الحملة الصليبيَّة الرابعة، ما أحدث فراغًا سياسيًّا وعسكريًّا في الأناضول هيَّأ لِظُهور دولة تملأ هذا الفراغ على أنقاض الدولتين المُتداعيتين.

ومن الناحية السياسيَّة، فقد أظهر عُثمان مقدرةً فائقة في وضع النُظم الإداريَّة لِإمارته، بحيثُ قطع العُثمانيون في عهده شوطًا بعيدًا على طريق التحوُّل من نظام القبيلة المُتنقلة إلى نظام الإدارة المُستقرَّة، ما ساعدها على توطيد مركزها وتطوُّرها سريعًا إلى دولةٍ كُبرى، ثُمَّ أنَّ مركز الإمارة في الشمال الغربي للأناضول، بِجوار العالم المسيحي، قد فرض على العُثمانيين سياسة عسكريَّة مُعيَّنة بِوصفها إمارة حُدوديَّة، والمعروف في تاريخ الأناضول أنَّ الإمارات التي نشأت على الحُدود كانت أوفر حظًا في عوامل النُمو والتطوُّر من إمارات الداخل. وتبدو أهميَّة موقع الإمارة العُثمانيَّة من ناحية بُعدها عن مناطق الغزو المغولي وعن نُفوذ الإمارات التُركمانيَّة القويَّة في جنوبي الأناضول وجنوبه الغربي، ووُقوعها بالقُرب من طريق الحرير الذي يربط المناطق الروميَّة في الغرب بالمناطق التي يُسيطر عليها المغول في الشرق، الأمر الذي جعل لها خصائص استراتيجيَّة واقتصاديَّة بارزة. أضف إلى ذلك، شكَّلت الإمارة الرباط الوحيد الذي يُواجه المناطق البيزنطيَّة التي لم تُفتح بعد، فجلب إليها هذا الوضع الخاص أعدادًا كثيرة من التُركمان الطامعين في الغزو والجهاد، والدراويش الباحثين عن المُريدين، والمُزارعين الفارين من وجه المغول، وقد وجدوا في أراضيها الخصبة مكانًا مُلائمًا لِمُمارسة نشاطهم الزراعي.

حُلم عُثمان
تنص المصادر العُثمانيَّة على قصَّةٍ حدثت في بداية عهد عُثمان، علَّق عليها المُؤرخون المُسلمون قديمًا (وخُصوصًا الأتراك) الكثير من الأهميَّة لِرمزيَّتها. على أنَّ المُؤرخين المُعاصرين يتفقون على أنَّ هذه القصة ليست أكثر من وسيلة لِتعليل ظُهور وتقدُّم الدولة العُثمانيَّة وإحاطة هذا بهالةٍ روحانيَّة، لا سيَّما وأنَّ خُلفاء عُثمان حققوا الكثير من المُنجزات الهامَّة، فتمكنوا من توحيد البلاد الإسلاميَّة بعد قُرونٍ من تمزّقها، وأعادوا إحياء الخلافة الفعليَّة بعد أن أصبحت خلافة صُوريَّة تحت حماية سلاطين المماليك بِمصر مُنذ أن قتل المغول المستعصم بالله آخر خُلفاء بني العبَّاس في بغداد، وحققوا ما لم تقدر عليه أيَّة سُلالة إسلاميَّة أُخرى، ألا وهو فتح القُسطنطينيَّة وتخطوها إلى أوروپَّا الشرقيَّة. أضف إلى ذلك المُصادفة حيثُ تختصر تلك القصة أحداث قرنين من حياة الدولة العُثمانيَّة قبل أن تقع.
أمَّا تفاصيل هذه القصة، فتُفيد أنَّ عُثمان كان يبيتُ في تكيَّة مُعلِّمه الشيخ «إده بالي»، كما اعتاد أن يفعل مُنذ صغره، ليتقرّب من الشيخ سالِف الذِكر وينتفع بعلمه. وفي إحدى المرَّات رأى مُصادفةً «مال خاتون» ابنة الشيخ المذكور، فتعلَّق بها ورغب أن يتزوَّجها، ولكنَّ والدها أبى أن يُزوجها له. فحزن عُثمان لِذلك وأظهر الصبر والجَلَد ولم يرغب الاقتران بغيرها حتَّى قبل أبوها بعد أن قصَّ عليه عُثمان منامًا رآه ذات ليلة، وهو أنَّهُ رأى الهلال صعد من صدر هذا الشيخ وبعد أن صار بدرًا نزل في صدره (أي في صدر عُثمان)، ثُمَّ خرجت من صُلبه شجرة كالسراي نمت في الحال حتَّى غطَّت العالم بِظلِّها، واستقرَّت جبالٌ ثلاثة تحتها، وخرجت أنهارُ النيل ودجلة والفُرات والطونة (الدانوب) من جذعها، ورأى ورق هذه الشجرة كالسُيوف والرماح يُحوِّلُها الريح نحو مدينة القُسطنطينيَّة. وتحت الأغصان وقف صبيانٌ نصارى شُقر وعلى رؤوسهم تُل أبيض ينشدون الشهادة يتبعها عهد الولاء للسُطان. وكان الخلق من حول هؤلاء الصبيان بلا عدد على شُطوط الأنهار وفي خلجانها، يشربون ويزرعون ويصطنعون الفساقي. وكانوا يتوالدون والخير يورف في ديارهم، دونما يكف الصبيان عن الاستظلال بغصون الشجرة والإنشاد. فتفائل الشيخ من هذا المنام وأظهر سُروره الكبير وقبل تزويج ابنته إلى عُثمان، وبشَّره بأن أسرته ونسله سوف يحكمون العالم، وقال له واصفًا ما يكون عليه الحاكم الصالح:

   عثمان الأول أيَ بُني! الآن أصبحت ملكًا! من الآن فصاعدًا، نحنُ نغتاظ؛ وأنت تُسعد! لنا الشَّقاء؛ وعليك الهناء! لنا الاتهام؛ وعليك الاحتمال! نحنُ العاجزون الخطَّاؤون؛ وأنت الصبور! نحنُ المُتقاتلون؛ وأنتم العادلون! نحنُ الحاسدون النمَّامون المُفترون؛ وأنتم المُتسامحون! أيَ بُني! من الآن فصاعدًا، نحنُ نُشرذم؛ وأنت تُوحِّد! نحنُ نتكاسل؛ وأنت تُنذر وتدفع! أيَ بُني! الصَّبر الصَّبر، فالزهرة لا تتفتح قبل أوانها. إيَّاك والنسيان: إرعى شعبك، وستزدهر دولتك! أيَ بُني! حملُك ثقيل، وشأنك عسير، وسُلطتك مُعلقة بِشعرة! أعانك ربُّ العالمين!    عثمان الأول
وبحسب الرواية البكطاشيَّة، التي لا يُمكن الحُكم على دقَّتها كونها لم ترد إلَّا في المصادر البكطاشيَّة، ولم تُؤكَّد عبر مصدرٍ مُستقل، ولم تتمتَّع بِتأييدٍ كبيرٍ من غالبيَّة الباحثين؛ فإنَّ زوجة أبي عُثمان كانت تعيش مع الحاج بكطاش وليّ الذي كان في الوقت نفسه من دراويش الطريقة الوفائيَّة، وتحديدًا من مُريدي الشيخ بابا إلياس الخُراساني، وهو شيخ الطريقة البابائيَّة، ولمَّا تُوفي إلياس المذكور أصبح الحاج بكطاش وليّ والشيخ إده بالي خلفتين من خُلفاء بابا إلياس الستون، وكانا يُنظمان جماعات الآخية الفتيان المُحاربة والعاملة في الصناعة والزراعة، والذين كان لهم نُفُوذٌ كبير في أوساط الناس، فلمَّا تزوَّج عُثمان بنت الشيخ إده بالي، استطاع عن طريق تلك المُصاهرة تأمين وضعه بِالسيطرة على الآخيات وجعلها تابعةً له. نتيجة تلك المُصاهرة، دخل مشايخ الآخيات تحت رئاسة العُثمانيين، مما يُحتمل أن يكون قد لعب دورًا كبيرًا في تأسيس الإمارة العُثمانيَّة وتطوُّرها بعد وفاة عُثمان إلى دولةٍ في زمن ابنه أورخان.

العلاقات السياسيَّة في بداية عهد عُثمان
جرى ربط ظُهور عُثمان على الساحة السياسيَّة، واكتسابه لِوصف زعيم الجهاد بالعلاقة التي ربطته بالشيخ «إده بالي» التي تُوِّجت بالمُصاهرة كما سلف. ويميلُ بعض المُؤرخين إلى اعتبار زواج عُثمان بإبنة هذا الشيخ أوَّل خُطوةٍ سياسيَّةٍ بارعةٍ منه، إذ أنَّ هذا الشيخ كان قائدًا لِلفرقة البابائيَّة المنسوبة إلى بابا إسحٰق الذي قاد ثورةً ضدَّ سلاجقة الروم مُنذ حوالي سنة 1239م إلى أن قُبض عليه وشُنق سنة 1241م. وتُفسِّر علاقة المُصاهرة بين العُثمانيين والشيخ القائد لِهذه الجماعة، علاقة العداء التي قامت بين العُثمانيين وبين إمارة كرميان. فالمعروف أنَّ أُسرة كرميان قد كوفئت من قِبل السلاجقة بِسبب خدماتها في إخضاع الثورة البابائيَّة. أظهر عُثمان، في بداية عهده، براعةً سياسيَّةً في علاقاته مع جيرانه، حيثُ التحالفات تتجاوز الخُطوط القبليَّة والإثنيَّة والدينيَّة، ورُبما تبع في ذلك غريزته ومُتطلبات تطلُّعاته السياسيَّة، إلَّا أنهُ لم يُخطئ في تقدير النتائج المُستقبليَّة لِلعلاقات العائليَّة التي أقامها لِنفسه وضمنها لابنه من بعده. فأعاد تشكيل الثقافة السياسيَّة لِسلاجقة الروم بما يتوافق مع حاجات إمارته، فكان أكثر إبداعًا من جيرانه التُركمان في عمليَّات الدمج بين التقاليد التُركيَّة والإسلاميَّة والبيزنطيَّة. وتعاون عُثمان مع جيرانه البيزنطيين من قادة المُدن والقُرى الروميَّة، فكانت عشيرته حين تنتقل بين مناطق الرعي في الصيف تترك حاجيَّاتها في قلعة «بيله جك» البيزنطيَّة، وعند عودتها كانت تُهدي مسؤولي هذه القلعة عربون تقدير لِخدماتهم، من الجبن وزُبدة الحليب المحفوظة في جُلود الحيوانات، والسجَّاد الجيِّد، الأمر الذي يعكس علاقة التعايش بين الرُعاة والمُزارعين أو ساكني المُدن. وشكَّلت علاقة الصداقة بين عُثمان و«كوسه ميخائيل» حاكم قرية هرمنكايا ذُروة هذا التعايش والامتزاج بين المُسلمين والروم. أمَّا علاقاته بِخُصومه من الجماعات الإثنيَّة الأُخرى كالمغول، الذين انتقل مُعظمهم إلى مناطق الأطراف في غربيّ الأناضول، والكرميانيين؛ فقد كانت عدائيَّة لأنَّ التُرك بِعامَّة كانوا في حال عداء مع المغول، ثُمَّ أنَّ الكرميانيين كانوا من غير الغُز (الأوغوز) على الأرجح، فقد اصطدم مع «جغدار»، أحد قادة المغول في أرض كرميان، والواضح أنَّ الصراع مع المغول والكرميانيين كان أشد في أوائل عهد الإمارة.
وتحالف عُثمان مع الآخية الفتيان، وهؤلاء هم الجماعات المُنظمة التي كان أعضائها يعملون في حرفةٍ واحدة وقد جعلوا واجبهم حفظ العدل ومنع الظلم وإيقاف الظالم عند حده واتباع الشريعة الإسلاميَّة وما تُمليه الأخلاق الحميدة وتنفيذ واجبات عسكرية إن دعت الحاجة للدفاع عن حقوقهم وحُقوق المُسلمين. كما تحالف مع القبائل التُركمانيَّة القادمة إلى الأناضول، والتي شكَّلت القلب النابض لِهذه المُقاطعات الحُدوديَّة بشكلٍ عام، والإمارة العُثمانيَّة بِشكلٍ خاص، لأنَّهم كانوا أكثر نشاطًا وفعاليَّةً من التُرك المُستقرِّين في المُدن، كما أغرى الكثير من التُركمان القاطنين في منطقة المياندر وبفلاغونية على الانضمام إلى قُوَّاته. وكان هؤلاء التُركمان مُحاربين جيدين، يتلهفون إلى الجهاد والغزو، وانتسب كُلٌّ منهم إلى أحد شُيوخ الطُرق وإلى إحدى التكايا، حيثُ تعلَّموا معنى الجهاد في سبيل الله إلى جانب الكثير من المبادئ الشرعيَّة الإسلاميَّة. إلَّا أنَّ قسمًا آخر من هؤلاء التُركمان لم تكن لديهم روابط وثيقة بالدين الإسلامي لِأسبابٍ مُختلفة، فعهد عُثمان إلى الشُيوخ والدراويش أن يقوموا بِتربية هؤلاء تربيةً إسلاميَّة ويُشبعونهم بالقِيم التي تتمثل في تعظيم فتح الأقطار لاكتساب أراضٍ جديدة لِتوسيع رقعة دار الإسلام. والواقع أنَّ هؤلاء الشُيوخ والدراويش كانوا شديدي التحمُّس لِترويج طُرق «أولياء خُراسان»، فأقبلوا على تعليم النازحين الجُدد بشراهةٍ واضحة. أمَّا من حيث التراتُبيَّة الرئاسيَّة، فقد كان عُثمان تابعًا في البداية لِأمير بنو شيان في قسطموني، ثُمَّ للسُلطان السُلجوقي من خلال أمير كرميان في كوتاهية، الذي كان تابعًا بدوره إلى الإلخان المغولي في تبريز. وفي الحقيقة كان السُلطان السُلجوقي قد فقد في هذه الفترة القُدرة الفعليَّة على تسيير الأُمور، وكان الإلخان يُسيِّر أعماله بِواسطة الوُلاة العاملين الذين هُم في الوقت ذاته قادة عامّون يُعينهم في الأناضول، وكان على الأُمراء الحُدوديين - ومن بينهم عُثمان - أن يُرسلوا الجُند في حالة طلب الإلخان ذلك. وبطبيعة الحال، فإنَّ أئمة المساجد كانوا يُذكرون على المنابر أولًا اسم الخليفة العبَّاسي في مصر، ثُمَّ الإلخان المُقيم في تبريز، ثُمَّ السُلطان السُلجوقي في قونية، وأخيرًا اسم الأمير المحلّي.

تمدُّد الإمارة العُثمانيَّة
الغزوات الأولى وفتح قلعة قراجة حصار

الأربعاء، 27 نوفمبر 2019

Phil Hughes

Phillip Joel Hughes (30 November 1988 – 27 November 2014) was an Australian Test and One Day International (ODI) cricketer who played domestic cricket for South Australia and Worcestershire. He was a left-handed opening batsman who played for two seasons with New South Wales before making his Test debut in 2009 at the age of 20. He made his One Day International Debut in 2013.[5]

Hughes scored his first Test century in March 2009, aged 20, in his second Test match for Australia, opening the batting and hitting 115 in the first innings against South Africa in Durban. This made Hughes Australia's youngest Test centurion since Doug Walters in 1965. In the second innings of the same match, Hughes scored 160, becoming the youngest cricketer in history to score centuries in both innings of a Test match (Australia won the match by 175 runs). On 11 January 2013, he became the first Australian batsman in the history of ODI cricket to score a century on debut, a feat which he achieved against Sri Lanka in Melbourne.[6]

On 25 November 2014, Hughes was hit in the neck by a bouncer, during a Sheffield Shield match at the Sydney Cricket Ground, causing a vertebral artery dissection that led to a subarachnoid haemorrhage. The Australian team doctor, Peter Brukner, noted that only 100 such cases had ever been reported, with "only one case reported as a result of a cricket ball".[7] Hughes was taken to St Vincent's Hospital in Sydney, where he underwent surgery, was placed into an induced coma and was in intensive care in a critical condition.[8] He died on 27 November, having never regained consciousness, three days before his 26th birthday
Early life and junior career
Hughes was born in Macksville, New South Wales to father Greg, a banana farmer, and Italian mother, Virginia.[10] Hughes was also a talented rugby league player who once played alongside former Australia international Greg Inglis.[5] He played his junior cricket for Macksville RSL Cricket Club, where he excelled so quickly that he was playing A-Grade at the age of 12 and in Representative Cricket he scored a century.[10] At the age of 17, Hughes moved from Macksville to Sydney to play for Western Suburbs District Cricket Club in Sydney Grade Cricket[11] while he attended Homebush Boys High. He scored 141* on his grade debut and enjoyed a solid 2006–07 season scoring 752 runs at an average of 35.81 with a highest score of 142*.[12] He represented Australia at the 2008 ICC Under-19 Cricket World Cup. He was coached at Triforce Sports Cricket Centre in Mortlake.

First-class career
After scoring runs prolifically for New South Wales youth teams and Western Suburbs in Grade Cricket, Hughes was handed a rookie contract by New South Wales for the 2007–08 season.[13] After scores of 51 and 137 for the New South Wales Second XI against Victoria's Second XI,[14] He was rewarded with a call up by Blues selectors to make his first-class debut. He played his first senior game against Tasmania on 20 November 2007 at the Sydney Cricket Ground. At 18 years and 355 days, Hughes was the youngest New South Wales debutant since Michael Clarke in 1999.[15] In a comfortable victory for New South Wales, Hughes opened the batting and got his career off to a solid start, scoring a fluent 51 and taking 2 catches.[16]

Hughes had an outstanding debut season for New South Wales, playing seven matches and scoring 559 runs at an average of 62.11 with one century and six fifties.[17] The highlight of Hughes' excellent season came in New South Wales' Pura Cup final victory over Victoria. He scored 116 off 175 balls in the Blues' second innings to help put his team in a commanding position. At 19 years of age, this innings made him the youngest ever player to score a century in a Sheffield Shield final.[18] Hughes was rewarded for his achievements by winning the New South Wales Rising Star Award and earning an upgrade to a full state contract for the 2008–09 season.[19][20]

Hughes was signed by Middlesex on a short-term contract, as cover for Murali Kartik, for the beginning of the 2009 English cricket season.[21][22] He was available for the first six weeks of the season and played in three County Championship matches, all eight of Middlesex's Friends Provident Trophy group matches and the first few matches in the Panthers' defence of the Twenty20 Cup.[23] In most other years, a contract for the opening six weeks of the season would involve playing four to six championship matches, some but not all FPT matches and no Twenty20, but the scheduling for 2009 had to accommodate ICC World Twenty20 and the eventually-cancelled Stanford Super Series. Despite Hughes holding an Italian passport by virtue of his Italian mother, Middlesex resisted signing him up as a Kolpak player and instead signed him as a foreign player.[24] He enjoyed strong success in England, scoring 574 runs in his three first-class matches, including three hundreds, at an average of 143.50.[25] Of his time at Middlesex, Hughes commented:

I thoroughly enjoyed it and the preparation has been great. The big thing that came out of it was that I played at three Test grounds I'm going to be playing on and got to experience them before this big series coming up. Lord's was my home ground there for Middlesex and I played at The Oval as well and Edgbaston. It couldn't have really worked out any better. The big thing was just going over there to experience the whole different culture really, the weather, the wickets and the bowlers as well."[26]

Hughes hit consecutive hundreds at the end of the 2010/11 season to earn the praise of Australian chairman of selectors Andrew Hilditch. In his last two first-class matches for New South Wales in the 2010/11 season he scored 54, 115, 138 and 93. Australia's chairman of selectors, Andrew Hilditch, said "I was thrilled for Phil, I think he turned the corner the last game. I spent a bit of time with him before the last Shield game and he seemed to be in a really good place. Having had a tough season, to emerge like he has is a credit to him."[27]

List A career
Less than a week after his debut in first-class cricket, on 28 November 2007, Hughes made his List A debut against Victoria at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. While he was not originally scheduled to play the match, sickness to Australian opening batsman Phil Jaques handed him the spot.[28] Just as he did in his first-class debut, Hughes passed 50 but was eventually dismissed for 68, top scoring for New South Wales in a "controlled" display.[29]

After New South Wales' wicket-keeper Brad Haddin was struck in the head by a top edge, Hughes took on the keeping duties for nine overs. On 17 May 2009, Hughes made his first limited overs century, scoring 119 for Middlesex against Warwickshire. On 29 July 2014, he made a double century (202 not out from 151 balls) in a match with South Africa A in Darwin
Australian international career
After consistently making runs at domestic level, Hughes was called up to replace Matthew Hayden on Australia's tour of South Africa in February and March 2009. He was selected to make his debut in the first Test match starting on 26 February 2009 at the New Wanderers Stadium in Johannesburg after making 53, then retiring, in Australia's tour match against the South African Board President's XI. He was dismissed for a duck in his first Test innings by Dale Steyn off just the fourth ball of the match, however he went on to top-score with 75 in the second innings, including 11 fours and a six.[31]

Hughes hit his maiden Test century in the first innings of the second Test at the Sahara Stadium, Kingsmead, Durban on 6 March 2009, before adding another hundred in the second Innings. In doing so, at the age of 20 years and 96 days, he became both the youngest Australian since Doug Walters to score a Test century[32] and the youngest player from any country to score a century in both innings of a Test match
During the 2009 Ashes campaign, Hughes' unorthodox technique was exploited by fast bowlers, who targeted his upper body and avoided bowling wide outside off stump, restricting his opportunities to play shots through the offside, most notably the cut shot. He was dropped from the team for the third Edgbaston Test in favour of Shane Watson, who opened the batting in his place and provided the Australians with an extra bowling option.[34][35] Upon his return from South Africa, the Phillip Hughes Award, to be given annually to a promising young cricketer from the local district, was announced in his home town of Macksville.[36] He was awarded the Bradman Young Cricketer of the Year at the Allan Border Medal ceremony by the CA in 2009.[37]

Hughes was a fringe player for the next year or so, playing some Tests to cover for other injured batsmen. He played two home Tests against Pakistan in this capacity, covering for the injured Ricky Ponting in the Boxing Day Test, then Simon Katich in the New Year's Test. He was then called up to the Test squad for the tour of New Zealand in March 2010 to replace Shane Watson in the first Test; he scored a rapid 86 from 75 balls in a small fourth-innings run chase in this Test.

Hughes was dropped from the 2010–2011 Ashes squad, but was called up for the Third Test as a replacement for the injured Simon Katich. He was a regular in the Australian team for the following year, playing in the last three Ashes tests, tours of Sri Lanka and South Africa and then a home series against New Zealand, but his spot came under pressure due to his inconsistency during that time. He achieved two big scores (126 in Colombo and 88 in Johannesburg), but his next-highest score was only 36,[38] and he consistently fell to catches at slip and gully. He was heavily criticised for his performance in the two-Test series against New Zealand, in which he managed only 41 runs at 10.25, and was dismissed exactly the same way in all four innings: caught at slip by Martin Guptill from the bowling of Chris Martin.[39] He was dropped from the Australian team following the series.[40]

In a stint for Worcestershire in the English County Cricket competition, Hughes made adjustments to his much maligned technique resulting in a more expansive range of strokes with more emphasis on legside play. Upon return to Australia, Hughes left his home state of New South Wales, moving to South Australia. This resulted in a strong return of runs in first-class cricket in the Sheffield Shield and one day cricket in the Ryobi Cup. These returns earned Hughes a recall to the Australian Test team to face Sri Lanka in Hobart following the retirement of Ricky Ponting in December 2012. He made an impressive first inning 86 batting at number 3.[41]

After almost a year away from the Test arena, Hughes found himself back in the Test side for the series against Sri Lanka in lieu of the retiring Ricky Ponting, occupying the number 3 position over Watson. Immediately he made an impact, scoring a solid 86 in the first Test match at Hobart, with a new-found confidence and tighter technique that had eluded him 12 months prior. He made two half centuries during his comeback scoring 233 runs at 46.60 in what was the most successful stint at the number 3 spot that the Australians had seen for some time. Hughes was set to receive a $1 million contract with Cricket Australia and be selected in Australia's ODI and T20 international squads in the wake of Michael Hussey's international retirement at the end of the 2012/13 Australia summer.[42] Hughes' selection in the Australian ODI squad was confirmed on 6 January 2013. National selection boss John Inverarity noted that players such as Hughes were included with an eye to the 2015 World Cup, suggesting that he was viewed as a long-term player for Australia in all three forms of the game.[43]

Hughes made his mark with a solid 112 (from 129 balls) in his ODI debut, becoming the first Australian to reach a century on debut.[44] He opened the innings with Aaron Finch at Melbourne, and added a 140-run 3rd wicket partnership with captain George Bailey, before being dismissed by Lasith Malinga. Hughes scored his 2nd match-winning ODI century with 138 (n.o) off 154 balls in the fifth ODI of the same series.

Following his successful summer season in Australia in 2012/2013, Hughes was selected to play in the Test series in India, but he struggled, scoring 147 runs in eight innings and averaging only 18.37. He played the first two Tests of the 2013 Ashes, and shared a world record tenth wicket partnership of 163 runs with debutant Ashton Agar in the first innings at Trent Bridge,[45] but was dropped after scoring only two runs in the following three innings.[46] Hughes did not play another Test for Australia, but played in ODI series in India in October 2013, in Zimbabwe (against both Zimbabwe and South Africa) in September 2014, and against Pakistan in the UAE in October 2014.[47] Hughes made his only Twenty20 International appearance for Australia against Pakistan in the United Arab Emirates on 5 October 2014.[48]

Awards
New South Wales Rising Star Award: 2008[19]
Bradman Young Cricketer of the Year: 2009
Sheffield Shield Player of the Year: 2008/09
Domestic Player of the Year: 2012/13
Personal life
A year before his death, Hughes bought a 90-hectare (220-acre) property in Macksville, with 70 Angus cattle.[49]

He was a close friend of teammates Michael Clarke[50] and David Warner,[51] as well as boxer Anthony Mundine.[52] He grew up with fellow Macksville local and former rugby league player Greg Inglis.[53]

Death
During the afternoon session of the Sheffield Shield match between South Australia and New South Wales at the Sydney Cricket Ground on 25 November 2014, Hughes, batting at 63 not out, was struck in the neck by the ball after missing an attempted hook shot to a bouncer from New South Wales bowler Sean Abbott.[54] Hughes was wearing a helmet, but the ball struck an unprotected area just below his left ear. He collapsed before receiving mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and was subsequently taken to St Vincent's Hospital, Sydney, where he underwent surgery and was placed into an induced coma.[55] Hughes' injury was a rare but described type of sport-related blunt-force cerebrovascular injury[56] called a vertebral artery dissection which led to subarachnoid haemorrhage.[57]

The match was immediately abandoned. The other two Shield games that were being played elsewhere in Australia—Brisbane and Melbourne—were abandoned at the end of the day, with Cricket Australia stating that "Given how players across the country are feeling right now, it's just not the day to be playing cricket."[58]

On the morning of 27 November 2014, Hughes died from his injuries, three days before his 26th birthday.[59][60][61] Australian cricket captain Michael Clarke read a statement on behalf of Hughes' family.[62]

In May 2015, Cricket Australia announced that an independent review would be undertaken into Hughes' death.[63]

As a result of Hughes' death, calls were made for improvements to the cricket helmet, and this has resulted in new designs which have additional guards fitted to the rear of the helmet. However, an independent review released by Cricket Australia states that "The now mandated British Standard helmet would have offered no protection where he was struck. There is limited scientific evidence that current neck guards will prevent a similar tragedy and they must be properly evaluated before they are mandated." [64] After the review was completed in 2016, it was concluded that the incident was purely accidental, and any changes made to improve safety during the review period, such as mandatory helmets for wicketkeepers, close-in fielders, and batsmen facing fast or medium pace bowling (even during net sessions) would not have prevented the accident. Also, for all Cricket Australia-sanctioned matches, defibrillators must be available at all grounds.[65][66]

Inquest
A coronial inquest into Hughes' death began on 10 October 2016.[67] The final result of investigation was that death of Hughes was a tragic accident arising from a minuscule misjudgement from the batsman and no players or umpires were at fault.[68]

Tributes
Many tributes were paid to Hughes within and outside the world of cricket, particularly over the rest of the 2014–15 summer season. Play on the second day of the third Test between Pakistan and New Zealand in the United Arab Emirates, due to begin hours after Hughes' death, was suspended, with the match extended by an extra day;[69] and the second ODI between Sri Lanka and England, played on 29 November, went ahead with the teams paying tribute to Hughes.[70] People from around the world posted photos of their bats on social media to pay tribute to Hughes.[71]

Hughes' funeral was held on 3 December 2014 at Macksville High School. The eulogy was given by Hughes' cousin, Nino Ramunno, with speeches also given by Hughes' siblings Jason and Megan; Michael Clarke and James Sutherland. Clarke, Aaron Finch and Tom Cooper were among the pallbearers. The service was attended by around one thousand people, including many national and sporting dignitaries as well as Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott. Thousands of people followed the service at venues in Macksville and around the country.[72] Representatives from the Indian team touring the country and about to contest the Border-Gavaskar Trophy included Virat Kohli and coach Ravi Shastri.

The first two matches of that series between Australia and India, to have been held in early December, were rescheduled to provide an additional five days of mourning period.[73] Hughes was named and listed as "the 13th man" for the first Test, and his test cap number 408 was sewn under the badge of all Australian players and painted on the field, and there were 63 seconds of applause before the start of the match.[74] During the first Test, David Warner and Steve Smith both raised their bats in commemoration of Phillip Hughes when they passed 63 not out, and when Australia reached 408 runs the match temporarily stopped as the crowd recognised the occasion. When Warner passed 63 in the fourth Test at the SCG, he kissed the ground near to the place where Hughes was fatally injured.[75] Michael Clarke continued to wear a black armband with Hughes's initials on it through to the final of the 2015 Cricket World Cup.[76]

Hughes' One-Day International shirt number, 64, was retired in his memory.[77] The scorecard of Hughes' final innings was formally amended to show him being 63 not out, instead of retired hurt.[78] A 63-over tribute match (31½ overs per team) featuring some Australians was played in Nepal on 11 April 2015.[79][80] During the men's trials for the 2015 Boat Race contested by Oxford and Cambridge, the senior men's trial boats for the Cambridge team were called 63 and Not Out in honour of Hughes.[81]

Sydney rapper Urthboy released "Nambucca Boy" as a tribute to Hughes.[82] Matthew Wade also has a likeness of Hughes tattooed on his right forearm.

In the first home Ashes series since Hughes' passing, Australia decided to extend play to the 5th day on the First Ashes Test in 2017, which coincided with the third anniversary of his passing, with David Warner looking skyward as he scored past 63*, with the Barmy Army also sang a parody as a tribute to Hughes to the tune of "Walking in a Winter Wonderland". Australia won the first test at The Gabba, Brisbane by 10 wickets.[83]

On 16 December 2017 it was announced by the NSW Roads Minister, Melinda Pavey, that the new bridge on the Pacific Highway over the Nambucca River near his rural NSW hometown of Macksville is to be named after Hughes

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