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John Cook

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John Cook (1935 - 21 September 2001) was an Austrian filmmaker . Born in Toronto , Ontario , Canada, Cook lived and worked most of his life in Europe and often referred to himself as " Viennese by choice", having moved to Austria in the late 1960s after a career in commercial photography in Paris . Little-known in his native Canada, Cook is considered, despite his small filmography, an important figure in Austrian cinema .

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15-431: John Cook may refer to: Entertainment [ edit ] John Cook (filmmaker) (1935–2001), Austrian filmmaker John Cook (musician) (1918–1984), English organist John Kingsley Cook (1911–1994), English artist Military [ edit ] John Pope Cook (1825–1910), American Civil War general John Cook (VC) (1843–1879), British soldier and recipient of

30-520: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . John Manuel Cook John Manuel Cook , FBA (1910–1994) was a British classical archaeologist. He was educated at Marlborough College , and went to King's College, Cambridge (1929–32). His older brother was Robert Manuel Cook , also a noted scholar of antiquity. In 1934–1936, he worked at the British School at Athens, studying archaic Greek pottery. He published an important study on

45-408: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages John Cook (filmmaker) Cook was the father of Canadian guitarist Jesse Cook . Michael Omasta, Olaf Möller (Ed.), John Cook. Viennese by Choice, Filmemacher von Beruf , FilmmuseumSynemaPublikationen, Vienna 2006, ISBN   3-901644-17-2 This article about an Austrian film director

60-723: The Saturday Review John Edwin Cook (died 1859) participated in John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry John F. Cook Sr. (1810–1855), American pastor and educator John F. Cook Jr. (1833–1910), American educator and civil rights activist John Williston Cook (1844–1922), American educator See also [ edit ] Cook (surname) John Coke (disambiguation) (pronounced Cook) John Cooke (disambiguation) Jonathan Cook (born 1965), British journalist based in Israel [REDACTED] Topics referred to by

75-777: The General Assembly of the Church of Scotland 1816–1817 John Cook (moderator 1859) (1807–1869), moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland 1859 John Cook (Haddington) (1807–1874), moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland 1866–1867 Science [ edit ] John Howard Cook (1872–1946), British physician, missionary, lecturer John Manuel Cook (1910–1994), British archaeologist John Call Cook (1918–2012), American geophysicist John Cook (Australian author) , cognitive scientist and creator of SkepticalScience.com Sports [ edit ] John Cook (coach) (born 1956), head coach of

90-712: The National Congress of Honduras, 2006–10 U.K. [ edit ] John Coke (fl. 1390) or John Cook, in 1390, Member of Parliament (MP) for Truro John Cook (fl. 1393) , in 1393, MP for Newcastle-under-Lyme John Cook (fl.1542) , MP for Orford John Cook (regicide) (1608–1660), English Solicitor General executed for regicide U.S. [ edit ] John Cook (governor) (1730–1789), American farmer and governor of Delaware John Parsons Cook (1817–1872), U.S. Representative from Iowa John C. Cook (1846–1920), U.S. representative and district judge from Iowa John Dillard Cook (1792–1852), justice of

105-556: The Supreme Court of Missouri John Cook (Texas politician) (born 1946), mayor of El Paso, Texas John R. Cook , member of the Texas House of Representatives Religion [ edit ] John Cook (Canadian minister) (1805–1892), Canadian clergyman and educator John Cook (professor, born 1739) (1739–1815), Scottish professor and a minister of the Church of Scotland John Cook (moderator 1816) (1770–1824), moderator of

120-664: The Victoria Cross John Cook (Medal of Honor, 1847) (1847–1915), American Civil War soldier and Medal of Honor recipient John H. Cook (1840–1916), English soldier who fought in the American Civil War Politics [ edit ] Canada [ edit ] John Cook (Upper Canada politician) (1791–1877) John Henry Cook (1902–1980), provincial politician in Ontario, Canada Honduras [ edit ] John Arnold Cook , on List of members of

135-812: The archaeological sites in Iran, studying the Achaemenid empire. He was fellow of the Society of Antiquaries (1948), of the German Archaeological Institute, and of the British Academy (1974). Throughout the 1950s, Cook and G.E. Bean conducted exhaustive archaeological surveys in Caria . They noted some Submycenean remains at Asarlik, and the Mycenaean remains at Miletus and near Mylasa . Cook also drew attention to

150-802: The reports of Mycenaean from the vicinity of Mylasa. It is now asserted by some scholars that the Carians were a people, perhaps Indo-European, who inhabited the interior of Anatolia and only descended to Caria and the Aegean at the end of the Bronze Age; but this is far from harmonising with the Greek tradition about them, and the writer for one finds it difficult to explain the Mycenaean in Caria (and perhaps adjacent islands) as being anything other than Carian. Our difficulty with early Caria

165-618: The resistance. He was a director of the British School at Athens from 1946 to 1954 and professor of ancient history and classical archaeology at the University of Bristol from 1958 to 1976. He is known for his explorations in the Troad , such as at Achilleion (Troad) , Lamponeia , Neandreia and Cebrene . In 1948–51, he excavated at Old Smyrna (Bayrakli) in collaboration with Ankara University. Starting in 1969, with his wife, he explored

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180-403: The same term This disambiguation page lists articles about people with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=John_Cook&oldid=1190257356 " Category : Human name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

195-608: The similarities between the Carians and the Mycenaeans , "Finds of third-millennium date are confined to a very few points on or near the Aegean coast, with the curious exception of one find-spot which seems to be near Yatağan at the head of the Marsyas valley. No second-millennium remains are known apart from the Mycenaean at Miletus, the Submycenaean at Asarlik (Termera) opposite Cos, and

210-558: The subject in the annual of the British School in 1938. In 1936 he was appointed assistant in humanity, and in 1938 lecturer in classics at Edinburgh University . In 1939, he married Enid May Robertson (1912/13–1976), who was also a classical scholar. They had two sons. During the Second World War Cook served in the Royal Scots regiment, and in the intelligence corps. In 1943 he was parachuted into western Greece, to serve with

225-744: The women's volleyball team at the University of Nebraska John Cook (golfer) (born 1957), American professional golfer John Cook (Minnesota golfer) , American golfer in the 1960s and 1970s, see Minnesota State Open John Cook (speedway rider) (born 1958), professional motorcycle speedway rider, world finalist John Cook (cricketer) (1946–2007), English cricketer John Cook (rugby league) (born 1941), Australian rugby league player Other [ edit ] John Cook (pirate) (died 1684), English buccaneer and pirate John Cook (reporter) , editor-in-chief of The Intercept John Douglas Cook (1808–1868), Scottish journalist, founding editor of

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