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Paul Nicholas Miller (born August 11, 1988), better known as GypsyCrusader, [a] is an American white supremacist internet personality. [4] Described as antisemitic and racist by various advocacy groups and the United States Department of Justice, [5] [3] [6] he frequently broadcasts himself on the internet cosplaying as various contemporary popular culture personas.
[90] [91] [92] The attendees of the first World Romani Congress in 1971 unanimously voted to reject the use of all exonyms for the Roma, including "Gypsy". [93] However, it is the group's common name amongst Romani people in the United Kingdom. [94] Romani slaves were first shipped to the Americas with Columbus in 1498. [95]
Gypsy: Married to a man, and sexually involved with Sidney Pierce. [158] Holly: Billie Piper: True Love: Is romantically involved with and implied to be sexually involved with Karen. [159] Susan Ivanova: Claudia Christian: Babylon 5: Shows attraction to men, has an offscreen relationship with telepath Talia Winters. [160] [161] Bradley Jackson ...
Gypsy caravans journeyed through North Dakota's territory since the 1880s and continued annually up until the 1940s. [63] Maryland. The highest concentration of ...
The Gypsy Woman: Representations in literature and visual culture. London, United Kingdom: Bloomsbury Publishing: I.B. Tauris. ISBN 9781788313810. OCLC 1226174067. Mladenova, Radmila (2019). Patterns of Symbolic Violence: The Motif of 'Gypsy' Child-theft across Visual Media (in English and German). Heidelburg University Publishing.
Nobody Wants This is an American romantic comedy television series created by Erin Foster, starring Kristen Bell, Adam Brody, Justine Lupe, and Timothy Simons, centered on the unlikely relationship between an outspoken, agnostic woman and an unconventional rabbi.
María Sierra, "Creating Romanestan: A Place to be a Gypsy in Post-Nazi Europe", in European History Quarterly, Vol. 49, Issue 2, April 2019, pp. 272–292. Carol Silverman, Romani Routes: Cultural Politics and Balkan Music in Diaspora. Oxford etc.: Oxford University Press, 2011. ISBN 978-0-19-530094-9
The presence of Romani people in Ukraine, locally referred to as the Цигани/Cyhany (IPA: [ˈt͡sɪɦɐnɘ]), was first documented in the early 15th century. [3] The Romani maintained their social organizations and folkways, shunning non-Romani contacts, education and values, often as a reaction to anti-Romani attitudes and persecution.