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The tulip is the most beautiful of all flowers, Therefore, he who despises the tulip offends God beyond measure". (p. 46, The Black Tulip) The city of Haarlem has offered a prize of 100,000 francs to whoever can grow a black tulip. At stake was not only the prize, but fame and honour; the winner would also have his name included in that given ...
The Black Tulip (French: La Tulipe noire) is a French-Italian-Spanish film which reused some names in the novel of the same title [3] by Alexandre Dumas but its story does not follow the novel. It is, essentially, a star vehicle for the popular French actor Alain Delon .
Black Tulip or The Black Tulip may refer to: . Operation Black Tulip, a 1945 plan to forcibly evict all Germans from the Netherlands; Black Tulip (Russian: «Чёрный тюльпан»), a nickname for Antonov An-12 transport aircraft used by the Soviet Air Force to repatriate the bodies of deceased soldiers from Afghanistan to the Soviet Union during the Soviet–Afghan War (1979–1989)
Operation Black Tulip was a plan proposed in 1945, just after the end of World War II, by the Dutch minister of Justice Hans Kolfschoten to forcibly deport all Germans from the Netherlands. The operation lasted from 1946 to 1948 and in total 3,691 Germans (15% of the German residents in the Netherlands) were deported.
The Black Tulip is a 1937 British, black-and-white historical drama film directed by Alex Bryce and starring Patrick Waddington, Ann Soreen, Campbell Gullan and Bernard Lee. [1] The film is based on the novel The Black Tulip by Alexandre Dumas. It was produced by Fox-British Pictures at Wembley Studios as a quota quickie.
The Black Tulip (Dutch: De zwarte tulp) is a 1921 Dutch silent adventure film directed by Maurits Binger. It is based on the novel The Black Tulip by Alexandre Dumas.
Black Tulip was founded by Yaroslav Zhilkin [8] when he was the head of the Union People's Memory All-Ukrainian Public Organization within the Ministry of Culture of Ukraine. [9] [10] Zhilkin has spent a considerable amount of his own money to support the organization, approximately $160,000 as of August 2015 [11] along with contributions from ...
The Black Tulip logo designed by Matt Palmateer. The Black Tulip is a 2010 film directed by novice Afghan-born American filmmaker Sonia Nassery Cole and starring Haji Gul Aser, Sonia Nassery Cole, Walid Amini, Jack Scalia, and Edoardo Costa. It was set in Afghanistan. [1]