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Pocahontas statue in Gravesend relisted 400 years after her death | Heritage

Historic England also lists London monument to founders of Jamestown colony, where Native American woman met English settlers A memorial to Pocahontas, who lost her original name and religion, and in 1617 her life, through encounters with English settlers, is to be relisted by Historic England to mark the 400th anniversary of her death.

'The peoples yogi': how Adriene Mishler became a YouTube phenomenon | Yoga

With 4 million subscribers and hundreds of thousands more watching free weekly videos, Yoga with Adriene is a social media sensation. What makes her fans so devoted? There are more than 2,400 people in the main hall of Alexandra Palace in north London, breathing in unison. Take the deepest breath youve taken all day, says

Anne Bront: the sister who got there first

Seen as less passionate than Emily, less accomplished than Charlotte, Anne is often overlooked. But her governess Agnes Grey is a clear model for Jane Eyre Anne Bront started writing her first novel some time between 1840 and 1845 while she was working as a governess for the Robinson family, at Thorp Green near York.

First Thing: Houthi missile fired at US warship shot down as Red Sea tensions rise | US news

US Central Command says missile from Houthi-controlled area of Yemen was launched towards USS Laboon before being shot down by fighter jets. Plus, is booing at the theatre actually a good thing? Good morning.

Frank D Gilroy, Pulitzer prize-winning playwright, dies aged 89 | Theatre

Writer whose best-known Broadway drama, The Subject Was Roses, led to a movie adaptation, has died in Monroe, New York Frank D Gilroy, whose play about a veterans fraught return home, The Subject Was Roses, won him a Pulitzer prize, died on Saturday in Monroe, New York. He was 89.