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The Roses of Eyam is a historical drama by Don Taylor about the Great Plague that swept Britain in 1665/66. It is largely based on the events that happened in the "plague village" of Eyam in Derbyshire, between September 1665 and December 1666 . [ 1 ]
BBC World News America has won several Peabody Awards. It won one in 2007 for White Horse Village. [12] In 2010, BBC World News America was a recipient of two 69th Annual Peabody Awards. One award was given to the program, calling it a "Unique Broadcast, Unique Perspective", which was described as "A nightly newscast like none the United States ...
BBC World News (1999–2019) BBC World News America (1999–2019) Beast (2000–07) Bedlam (2012–16) Being Human (2009–13) Bellamy's People (2010–14) Ben Elton: The Man from Auntie (2001–09; 2013) The Ben Elton Show (1998–99; 2010–14) The Benny Hill Show (1998–2006) Bergerac (1998–2008) The Best of Tommy Cooper (1998–2005) Big ...
William Mompesson (1639 – 7 March 1709) was a Church of England priest whose decisive action when his Derbyshire parish, Eyam, became infected with the plague in the 17th century averted more widespread catastrophe.
On the course of BBC News channel mergers, Live (also styled as Live with Lucy Hockings), which has a similar background as BBC News Now and was also presented by Lucy Hockings, aired for the last time on 3 March 2023 on the then BBC World News. However, BBC announced that Lucy Hockings would stay as a presenter for the merged channel. [2]
Georgia Senator Raphael Warnock enthusiastically endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris during his speech on the opening night of the 2024 Democratic National Convention in Chicago on Monday.
The programme's slot originally dates back to 2004, as BBC Four News before evolving into The World and World News Today with Zeinab Badawi. [5] During this period it was the only programme produced by BBC News for UK audiences devoted principally to international news, simulcast by what was then BBC World (later BBC World News), the BBC News ...