Royal Road (other)
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Royal Road (other)
The Royal Road was an ancient Persian highway. Royal Road may also refer to: * Royal Road, Kraków, Poland * ''The Royal Road'', a 2015 documentary film See also * ''Royal Road to Card Magic'', a 1948 book by Jean Hugard and Frederick Braue * IV△7–V7–iii7–vi progression, also known as the royal road chord progression * Great Royal Road of the ancient Mauryan Empire, in what is now Pakistan * King's Highway (other) * King's Way * Royal Roads, a roadstead in Canada * Royal Route, Warsaw * '' El Camino Real'' (Spanish) * ''Estrada Real'' (Portuguese) * ''Rue Royale'' (French) * ''Via Regia The Via Regia (Royal Highway) is a European Cultural Route following the route of the historic road of the Middle Ages. There were many such ''viae regiae'' associated with the king in the medieval Holy Roman Empire. History Origins The ...
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Royal Road
The Royal Road was an ancient highway reorganized and rebuilt by the Persian king Darius the Great (Darius I) of the first (Achaemenid) Persian Empire in the 5th century BC. Darius built the road to facilitate rapid communication on the western part of his large empire from Susa to Sardis. Mounted couriers of the Angarium were supposed to travel from Susa to Sardis in nine days; the journey took ninety days on foot. Course of the Royal Road The course of the road has been reconstructed from the writings of Herodotus, archeological research, and other historical records. It began in Sardis near the Aegean coast of Lydia, traveled east through Anatolia (crossing the Halys according to Herodotus), and passed through the Cilician Gates to the old Assyrian capital Nineveh in upper Mesopotamia, then turned south to Babylon. From near Babylon, it is believed to have split into two routes, one traveling northeast then east through Ecbatana and then along the Silk Road (via the Gre ...
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Royal Road, Kraków
The Royal Road or Royal Route ( pl, Droga Królewska, ) in Kraków, Poland, begins at the northern end of the medieval Old Town and continues south through the centre of town towards Wawel Hill, where the old royal residence, Wawel Castle, is located. The Royal Road passes some of the most prominent historic landmarks of Poland's royal capital, providing a suitable background to coronation processions and parades, kings' and princes' receptions, foreign envoys and guests of distinction traveling from a far country to their destination at Wawel. The Royal Road starts outside the northern flank of the old city walls in the medieval suburb of Kleparz, now a central district of Kraków. It begins at St. Florian's Church (''Kościół św. Floriana''), containing the relics of St. Florian – the Patron Saint of Poland – miraculously saved numerous times in the 12th, 16th and 17th centuries. St. Florian's Church was also the starting point for royal funeral processions, concluding ...
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The Royal Road
''The Royal Road'' is a 2015 documentary film directed by Jenni Olson. The film premiered in the New Frontier section of the 2015 Sundance Film Festival. In the film's voiceover, Olson reflects on her butch identity and experiences of unrequited love. The film went on to earn the award for Best LGBTQ Film at the 2015 Ann Arbor Film Festival. Consisting entirely of 16mm urban landscape shots and a lyrical stream of consciousness voiceover, the film touches on a wide range of topics from reflections on classic Hollywood film to the history of the Spanish colonization of California and the Mexican American War. A voiceover cameo appearance by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Tony Kushner serves as the centerpiece for the film's focal point segment entitled, "In Defense of Nostalgia." Production Olson cited '' Sherman's March'' and Alfred Hitchcock's '' Vertigo'' as influences. San Francisco Film Society was the film's fiscal sponsor. The film had its Bay Area premiere on April ...
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Jean Hugard
Jean Hugard (4 December 1871 - 14 August 1959) was an Australian professional magician. History Hugard was born John Gerard Rodney Boyce in Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia, the third son of John Alexander Boyce and Anne Brown. Educated at Toowoomba Grammar School, later he joined the staff of the Queensland National bank. After a late start and from a completely non-theatrical background he rose to become one of the world's great stage magicians, often dubbed the Dean of Magicians, and the last of a trio (Robert-Houdin, Hoffman, Hugard) of famed authors on the art of legerdemain. Over the course of his life he performed as Oscar Kellmann, Chin Sun Loo, Ching Ling Foo, and Jean Hugarde. He was inspired in 1880 seeing a Haselmayer show. He eventually began his professional career in 1896. In 1898 Gerard left the bank, and with several partners founded Burketown's Endeavour Meatworks (producing tinned beef) to solve the problem of getting Gulf Country cattle to market. The ventu ...
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Frederick Braue
Frederick Braue ronounced BROW-ee/small> (March 9, 1906 – July 3, 1962) was an American journalist notable for his contribution to the field of card magic. He was a semi-professional magician, specializing in card magic, of which he was a master. Braue co-authored several books with Jean Hugard, including ''Expert Card Technique'' and ''Royal Road to Card Magic''. As Braue and Hugard lived on opposite sides of the America, they wrote their books via correspondence. In the 1940s, Frederick Braue edited a children's page, called ''Aunt Elsie's Page'', for the ''Oakland Tribune'' newspaper. Frederick Braue contributed to many magazines including a column in Hugard's Magic Monthly, which he edited from 1959 to 1962. He also invented numerous card sleights and effects including: * Braue Reversal which is a method for reversing a card in the deck in the course of a cutting action. * Braue Addition * Rear Palm (in 1935) * Homing Card Published works In collaboration with Jean Hug ...
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IV△7–V7–iii7–vi Progression
The , also known as the IVM7–V7–iii7–vi progression or , is a common chord progression within J-pop, contemporary Japanese pop music. The chord progression It involves the seventh chords of subdominant, IV, Dominant (music), V, and mediant, iii, along with a submediant, vi chord; for example, in the key of C major, this would be: FM7–G7–Em7–Am. The chord progression may be Resolution (music), resolved with the Tonic (music), tonic chord, for example in a I–IV–V–I, IVM7–V7–I or a ii–V–I progression, ii7–V7–I progression. IVM7–V7–iii7–vi–ii7–V7–I creates a full circle of fifths progression in the major mode, with V7 substituting for leading-tone, vii°. In C major, this would be FM7–G7–Em7–Am–Dm7–G7–C. The basic progression can be found in two versions. The first uses V7 in its third inversion (G7/F), the other uses V7 in its root position (G7). The former appears in lushly orchestrated pop arrangements, while the latter ap ...
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