Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
King achieved the International Master title in 1982 and the Grandmaster title in 1989. He won minor tournaments around the world and recorded promising results at some prestigious events; for example, 4th= at Bern 1987, 4th= British Championship 1987, 1st= (with Boris Gelfand) at the Sydney Open 1988, 5th= London 1988, 2nd= Dortmund 1988, and 2nd (after Bent Larsen) London 1989.
Dan apparently first ruled in Zealand, as the Chronicle states that it was when he saved his people from an attack by Emperor Augustus that the Jutes and the men of Fyn and Scania also accepted him as king. Consequently, the resulting expanded country of Denmark was named after him. Dan's wife was named Dana, and his son was named Ro.
Dan King may refer to: Dan King (skeptic) (1791–1864), American physician and early skeptical writer; Dan King (basketball) (1931–2003), American basketball player;
Daniel King (cryptanalyst), United States Navy cryptanalyst who first confessed to, and then recanted, spying on the USA; Daniel King (racewalker) (born 1983), British racewalker; Daniel King (cricketer, born 1784) (1784–1836), English cricketer; Daniel King (cricketer, born 1983), Australian cricketer and classicist
Daniel King (January 7, 1931 – January 20, 2003) was an American professional basketball player. He played a season for the Baltimore Bullets of the National Basketball Association (NBA). King was a two-sport star at Western Kentucky University , playing both basketball and baseball for the Hilltoppers from 1951 to 1954 and was inducted into ...
Daniel King (born 30 May 1983) is a British racewalker. He competed for England in the men's 20 km walk at the 2006 Commonwealth Games and at a number of World Cup ...
He is known for portraying Daniel King in the HBO television series Insecure (2016–2018). [1] He played the lead role in the 2018 horror film The First Purge. [2]
Dan King (1791–1864) was an American physician and early skeptical writer. [1] King was born in Mansfield, Connecticut. [2] He practiced medicine in Rhode Island and Massachusetts until his retirement in 1859. King is most notable for his book Quackery Unmasked (1858) which heavily criticized homeopathy and other alternative medicine claims. [3]