Abstract is: Margaret Dryburgh (24 February 1890 – 21 April 1945) was an English teacher and missionary. Born in Sunderland, England, she later became a missionary in Singapore, where she was captured in the Second World War. The plight of Dryburgh and her fellow inmates such as Betty Jeffrey in a Japanese prisoner of war camp inspired the 1996 film Paradise Road. She wrote The Captives' Hymn while imprisoned.
human | Q5 |
P268 | Bibliothèque nationale de France ID | 140063736 |
P9564 | Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Christianity ID | dryburgh-margaret |
P646 | Freebase ID | /m/047twkb |
P213 | ISNI | 0000000039653544 |
P434 | MusicBrainz artist ID | d9c509d8-b170-4212-8774-122c1c53b4a8 |
P5882 | Muziekweb performer ID | M00000394990 |
P3430 | SNAC ARK ID | w6c54sv6 |
P214 | VIAF ID | 78318809 |
P7859 | WorldCat Identities ID (superseded) | lccn-no00019656 |
P7763 | copyright status as a creator | copyrights on works have expired | Q71887839 |
P27 | country of citizenship | United Kingdom | Q145 |
Malaysia | Q833 | ||
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland | Q174193 | ||
P69 | educated at | Durham University | Q458393 |
P735 | given name | Margaret | Q4963612 |
Margaret | Q4963612 | ||
P6379 | has works in the collection | Museon-Omniversum | Q1954331 |
Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies | Q2282075 | ||
P1412 | languages spoken, written or signed | English | Q1860 |
P106 | occupation | nurse | Q186360 |
missionary | Q219477 | ||
drawer | Q15296811 | ||
P5008 | on focus list of Wikimedia project | Wikiproject Oorlogsbronnen | Q118404701 |
P140 | religion or worldview | Presbyterianism | Q178169 |
P21 | sex or gender | female | Q6581072 |
Category:Margaret Dryburgh | wikimedia | |
Margaret Dryburgh | wikipedia |
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