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<div id="mp-welcome"><h1>Welcome to [[Wikipedia]]</h1>,</div>
<div id="mp-welcome"><h1>Welcome to [[Wikipedia]]</h1>,</div>
<div id="mp-free">the [[free content|free]] [[encyclopedia]] that [[Help:Introduction to Wikipedia|anyone can edit]].</div>
<div id="mp-free">the [[free content|free]] [[encyclopedia]] that [[Help:Introduction to Wikipedia|anyone can edit]].</div>
<div id="articlecount">[[Special:Statistics|{{NUMBEROFACTIVEUSERS}}]] active editors · [[Special:Statistics|{{NUMBEROFARTICLES}}]] articles in [[English language|English]]</div>
<div id="articlecount"><ul><li>[[Special:Statistics|{{NUMBEROFACTIVEUSERS}}]] active editors</li><li>[[Special:Statistics|{{NUMBEROFARTICLES}}]] articles in [[English language|English]]</li></ul></div>
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Revision as of 22:59, 6 January 2025

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From today's featured article

Ian Carmichael

Ian Carmichael (18 June 1920 – 5 February 2010) was an English actor who had a career that spanned seventy years. Born in Kingston upon Hull, he trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, but his studies—and the early stages of his career—were curtailed by the Second World War. After initial success in revue and sketch productions, he was cast by the film producers John and Roy Boulting to star in a series of satires, starting with Private's Progress in 1956 through to I'm All Right Jack in 1959. In the mid-1960s he played Bertie Wooster for BBC Television for which he received positive reviews, including from P. G. Wodehouse, the writer who created the character of Wooster. In the early 1970s he played another upper-class literary character, Lord Peter Wimsey, the amateur but talented investigator created by Dorothy L. Sayers. Carmichael was often typecast as an affable but bumbling upper-class innocent, but he retained a disciplined approach to training and rehearsing. (Full article...)

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Garni Temple

The Garni Temple is a classical colonnaded structure in the village of Garni, in central Armenia, around 30 km (19 mi) east of Yerevan. Built in the Ionic order, it is the best-known structure and symbol of pre-Christian Armenia. It has been described as the "easternmost building of the Greco-Roman world" and the only largely preserved Hellenistic building in the former Soviet Union. It is conventionally identified as a pagan temple built by King Tiridates I in the first century AD as a temple to the sun god Mihr (Mithra). It collapsed in a 1679 earthquake, but much of its fragments remained on the site. Renewed interest in the 19th century led to excavations in the early and mid-20th century. It was reconstructed in 1969–75, using the anastylosis technique. It is one of the main tourist attractions in Armenia and the central shrine of Hetanism (Armenian neopaganism). This aerial photograph shows the Garni Temple in the winter.

Photograph credit: Yerevantsi

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