John Paul Jones - translation to γαλλικά
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John Paul Jones - translation to γαλλικά

AMERICAN NAVAL OFFICER (1747-1792)
Paul Jones (pirate); Captain John Paul Jones; I have not yet begun to fight; America's invasion of Whitehaven; John Paul Jones (sailor); Jones, John Paul
  •  access-date=2020-10-15}}</ref> of Jones
  • [[John Paul Jones Memorial]] in [[Washington, D.C.]]
  • John Adams reviews Jones' Irish Marines at [[Lorient]], 13 May 1779.
  • The birthplace and original home of John Paul Jones in [[Arbigland]], southern Scotland
  • A 1908 plaster casting of John Paul Jones taken from an original  modeling in 1781 by Jean-Antoine Houdon. National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London.
  • Jones by Moreau le Jeune, 1780
  • The house of John Paul Jones in [[Fredericksburg, Virginia]], inherited from his brother William
  • John Paul Jones seizing Lady Selkirk's silverware
  • John Barry]], honored on U.S. Postage<br>Navy Issue of 1936}}
  • A painting of [[Whitehaven]], [[Cumberland]], on the northwest coast of England, by Matthias Read (between 1730 and 1735)
  • "Paul Jones the Pirate", British caricature
  • John Paul Jones flag]]" was entered into Dutch records to help Jones avoid charges of piracy when he captured the ''Serapis'' under an "unknown flag."
  • The painting ''Action Between the Serapis and Bonhomme Richard'' by [[Richard Paton]], published 1780
  • Jones's marble and bronze [[sarcophagus]] at the [[United States Naval Academy]]
  • Captain Michael Gordon, USN, receives in 2005 a copy of the local newspaper from April 1778 from the chairman of the Whitehaven Harbour Commissioners, Gordon Thomson

John Paul Jones         
John Paul Jones (1747-1792), United States Naval commander in the Revolutionary War; stage name of John Baldwin (born 1946), bassist and keyboard player for Led Zeppelin
Jones         
Jones, family name; John Paul Jones (1747-92), American Naval commander in the Revolutionary War
John Baldwin         
John Baldwin (born 1946), bassist and keyboard player for Led Zeppelin who uses the stage name "John Paul Jones"

Ορισμός

Paul Jones
¦ noun a ballroom dance in which the dancers change partners after circling in concentric rings.
Origin
1920s: named after the American admiral John Paul Jones (1747-92).

Βικιπαίδεια

John Paul Jones

John Paul Jones (born John Paul; July 6, 1747 – July 18, 1792) was a Scottish-American naval captain who was the United States' first well-known naval commander in the American Revolutionary War. Credited as being the "Father of the American Navy" (a title also credited to John Barry, John Adams, and sometimes Joshua Humphreys), Jones is highly regarded as one of the greatest naval commanders in the history of the United States.

Jones was a Freemason, and made many friends among U.S political elites (including John Hancock and Benjamin Franklin) as well as enemies (who accused him of piracy), and his actions in British waters during the Revolution earned him an international reputation that persists to this day.

Jones was born and raised in Scotland, became a sailor at the age of thirteen, and served as commander of several merchantmen. After having killed one of his mutinous crew members with a sword, he fled to the Colony of Virginia and around 1775 joined the newly founded Continental Navy in their fight against the Kingdom of Great Britain in the American Revolutionary War. He commanded U.S. Navy ships stationed in France, led one failed assault on Britain, and several attacks on British merchant ships. Left without a command in 1787, he joined the Imperial Russian Navy and obtained the rank of rear admiral.