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The Standard Bearer
The Standard Bearer may refer to: * ''The Standard Bearer'' (album), 1989 album by Wallace Roney * ''The Standard Bearer'' (Rembrandt, 1636) * ''The Standard Bearer'' (Lanzinger painting), portrait of Adolf Hitler * ''The Standard Bearer'' (magazine), published by the Protestant Reformed Churches in America See also *Standard-bearer A standard-bearer, also known as a flag-bearer is a person (soldier or civilian) who bears an emblem known as a standard or military colours, i.e. either a type of flag or an inflexible but mobile image, which is used (and often honoured) as a ...
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The Standard Bearer (album)
''The Standard Bearer'' is the third album by American jazz trumpeter Wallace Roney which was recorded in 1989 and released on the Muse label early the following year.Jazzlists: Muse LP series discography: 5350 to 5399
accessed February 12, 2018


Reception

The review by Scott Yanow stated, "Roney's ''The Standard Bearer'' (dedicated to ) is excellent. ... Creative frameworks and inspired solos keep this recording from being just a bop revival session. In fact, except for Roney's sound, everything about the music is quite fresh".
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The Standard Bearer (Rembrandt, 1636)
''The Standard Bearer'' is a three-quarter-length self-portrait by Rembrandt formerly in the Paris collection of Elie de Rothschild, and purchased by the Rijksmuseum for 175 million euros with assistance from the Dutch state and Vereniging Rembrandt in 2021. It was painted on the occasion of the artist's move from Leiden to Amsterdam and is seen as an important early work that "shows Rembrandt's ambition to paint a group portrait for the Amsterdam militia, at the time the most valued commission a painter could be awarded." Rembrandt's flag bearer has several copies in oil, and later prints may be from such copies, but this painting nevertheless has a provenance reaching far into the 18th-century. It was documented as a self-portrait by Smith in 1836, who wrote: Cornelis Hofstede de Groot agreed with him in 1914, but stopped short of calling it a self-portrait. He wrote: 2022 acquisition by the Netherlands In 2019 the painting has been classified as a national treasure of Fr ...
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The Standard Bearer (Lanzinger Painting)
''Der Bannerträger'' (''The Standard Bearer'') is a painting by the Austrian artist Hubert Lanzinger of a stylized Adolf Hitler, the leader of the Nazi Party and German Führer. The painting portrays Hitler sitting on a black horse, wearing armor in the manner of a 15th-century knight and carrying a Nazi flag that billows behind him. Hitler is portrayed as a messianic figure in the painting gazing symbolically towards a greater future for Germany. It is an oil painting on wood and was completed between 1934 and 1936. It was first publicly displayed at the Great German Art Exhibition in Munich in 1937. ''The Standard Bearer'' was made into a postcard by Heinrich Hoffmann in 1938. It is part of the collection of the United States Army Center of Military History in Washington, DC. It was one of 10,000 works of Nazi propaganda and German military art seized by the United States Army in the aftermath of World War II. The painting was damaged after the war by an American soldier who ...
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The Standard Bearer (magazine)
The Protestant Reformed Churches in America (PRC or PRCA) is a Protestant denomination of 33 churches and over 8,000 members. History Beginning and formation The PRC was founded in 1924 as a result of a controversy regarding common grace in the Christian Reformed Church. At that time the Christian Reformed Church had adopted three doctrinal points on the subject of common grace. Reverends Herman Hoeksema, George Ophoff, and Henry Danhof rejected these three points and maintained them to be contrary to the Reformed confessions of faith. Soon thereafter, when these men said they could not abide by these three points, they were disciplined through suspension, or deposition, from the ministry by their respective classes. The CRC maintained that the position of these three men was inconsistent with the Bible's teachings. The men objected to this deposition also from a church political point of view, arguing that only the consistory has the right to depose their minister, not a class ...
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