Margaret Dryburgh

Teacher, Nurse and Missionary

DBpedia resource is: http://dbpedia.org/resource/Margaret_Dryburgh

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.

Wikimedia Commons category is Margaret Dryburgh

Born 1890-02-21 in Sunderland (Q188304)
Died 1945-04-21 in Bangka Island (Q188428)

Margaret Dryburgh is …
instance of (P31):
humanQ5

External links are
P268Bibliothèque nationale de France ID140063736
P9564Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Christianity IDdryburgh-margaret
P646Freebase ID/m/047twkb
P213ISNI0000000039653544
P434MusicBrainz artist IDd9c509d8-b170-4212-8774-122c1c53b4a8
P5882Muziekweb performer IDM00000394990
P3430SNAC ARK IDw6c54sv6
P214VIAF ID78318809
P7859WorldCat Identities ID (superseded)lccn-no00019656

P7763copyright status as a creatorcopyrights on works have expiredQ71887839
P27country of citizenshipUnited KingdomQ145
MalaysiaQ833
United Kingdom of Great Britain and IrelandQ174193
P69educated atDurham UniversityQ458393
P735given nameMargaretQ4963612
MargaretQ4963612
P6379has works in the collectionMuseon-OmniversumQ1954331
Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean StudiesQ2282075
P1412languages spoken, written or signedEnglishQ1860
P106occupationnurseQ186360
missionaryQ219477
drawerQ15296811
P5008on focus list of Wikimedia projectWikiproject OorlogsbronnenQ118404701
P140religion or worldviewPresbyterianismQ178169
P21sex or genderfemaleQ6581072

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