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League of Legends (LoL), commonly referred to as League, is a 2009 multiplayer online battle arena video game developed and published by Riot Games.Inspired by Defense of the Ancients, a custom map for Warcraft III, Riot's founders sought to develop a stand-alone game in the same genre.
To Find Happiness is the seventh studio album by Australian musician, Josh Pyke. The album was announced on 5 November 2021 alongside its fourth single "Circle of Light" and released on 18 March 2022. [6] The album debuted at number 17 and is Pyke's eighth Top 50 album. [7]
The Assyrian conquest of Aram (c. 856-732 BCE) concerns the series of conquests of largely Aramean, Phoenician, Sutean and Neo-Hittite states in the Levant (modern Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, and northern Jordan) by the Neo-Assyrian Empire (911-605 BCE).
Lionel Edward Pyke (1854–1899), English barrister; Magnus Pyke (1908–1992), British scientist and media personality; Margaret Pyke (1893–1966), campaigner for family planning; Mike Pyke (born 1984), Canadian player of rugby and Australian rules football; Stuart Pyke, British sports journalist and broadcaster; Veronica Pyke (born 1981 ...
The city became the eastern border of Aram-Damascus which was conquered by the Neo-Assyrian Empire in 732 BC. [ 185 ] The Hebrew Bible ( Second Book of Chronicles 8:4) records a city by the name "Tadmor" as a desert city built (or fortified) by King Solomon of Israel ; [ 186 ] Flavius Josephus mentions the Greek name "Palmyra", attributing its ...
In May 2017, Pyke announced the release of his first greatest hits album, The Best of Josh Pyke, alongside new single "Into the Wind". [9] The album was released on 30 June 2017. In March 2020, Pyke released "I Don't Know", the lead single from his sixth studio album, Rome , which was released on 28 August.
Pyke was the first Englishman to get into Germany and out again, and he was encouraged to write a series of articles for the Chronicle. [19] Pyke refused, citing lost interest in being a war correspondent. [20] He divided his time between lecturing on his experiences [21] and writing for the Cambridge Magazine, edited by Charles Kay Ogden. [3]
Conceptual design of Project Habakkuk aircraft carrier with 600-metre (1,969 ft) runway. Project Habakkuk or Habbakuk (spelling varies) was a plan by the British during the Second World War to construct an aircraft carrier out of pykrete, a mixture of wood pulp and ice, for use against German U-boats in the mid-Atlantic, which were beyond the flight range of land-based planes at that time.