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"Eskola is a Finnish surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Ants Eskola, Estonian actor and singer * Chris Eskola, American musician * Jalmari Eskola, Finnish athlete * Pentti Eskola, Finnish geologist * Seikko Eskola, Finnish historian Category:Estonian-language surnames Category:Finnish- language surnames "
"The Blythe Heat were a professional baseball team based in Blythe, California. They played in the Arizona Winter League, a short-season instructional winter league affiliated with the North American League. They began play in 2007 and played their home games at Alexander Field in Blythe. They are the only team in the instructional league that play their home games somewhere other than the league's home base of Yuma, Arizona's Desert Sun Stadium. They were owned by Diamond Sports & Entertainment. The team's uniform logo was that of the former Western Baseball League team, the Chico Heat, predecessors to the GBL's Chico Outlaws. They won the AWL Championship in their first season in March 2008. They defeated the Canada Miners 10-5 in the Championship Game. The franchise folded in 2011 after the NAL folded. ==Season-by-season records== Arizona Winter League: { - ! bgcolor="#DDDDFF" width="5%" Season ! bgcolor="#DDDDFF" width="5%" W ! bgcolor="#DDDDFF" width="5%" L ! bgcolor="#DDDDFF" width="5%" Win % ! bgcolor="#DDDDFF" width="5%" Place ! bgcolor="#DDDDFF" width="10%" Playoff - align=center 2008 8 11 .421 T-4th Qualified. Defeated Canada in the Championship Game. - align=center 2009 8 12 .400 3rd, American Division Did not qualify. } ==External links== * Arizona Winter League website * North American League website * Palo Verde/Quartzsite Times * Guilin brothers in the minors (Palo Verde/Quartzsite Times) * Slideshow: Blythe Heat - 2008 Winter League Champions Palo Verde/Quartzsite Times, August 5, 2008 Category:Arizona Winter League teams Category:Blythe, California Category:Sports in Riverside County, California Category:Defunct baseball teams in California "
"Maria Anna Josepha of Austria (30 December 1654 – 14 April 1689), was a Duchess consort of Jülich-Berg and Electoral Princess of the Palatinate. Born in Regensburg, she was the youngest surviving daughter of Ferdinand III, Holy Roman Emperor and his third wife Eleonora Gonzaga. ==Life== In Wiener Neustadt on 25 October 1678 Maria Anna married Johann Wilhelm, Electoral Prince of the Palatinate and brother of Empress Eleonor Magdalene, third wife of Emperor Leopold I (Maria Anna's half-brother). The wedding ceremony was performed by Archbishop Leopold Karl von Kollonitsch, who that in memory of this event and the previous wedding of Maria Anna's sister Eleanor was in the main square of Wiener Neustadt build a Marian column.Ferdinand C. Böheim, Wendelin Boeheim: Chronicle of Wiener-Neustadt, vol. 2, Prandel & Ewald, 1863, p. 173. After the marriage, the Electoral Prince and Princess settled in Düsseldorf, where they led an elaborate royal household.K. Strauven: About Artistic life and work in Dusseldorf to Düsseldorf school of painting under Director Schadow, H. Voss, 1862, p. 12. As a gift to the newlyweds, Philip William, Elector Palatine (Johann Wilhelm's father), ceded to them the Duchies of Jülich and Berg in 1679. During her marriage, the Electoral Princess gave birth to two children, but neither survived infancy:Gustav Prümm: A win for life, Books on Demand, 2009, p. 54. * A son (b. and d. Düsseldorf, 6 February 1683). * A son (b. and d. Düsseldorf, 5 February 1686). Maria Anna died of tuberculosis during a visit to the imperial court in Vienna. She was buried in the Imperial Crypt. ==AncestryNotesReferences== *Harm Klueting, Wolfgang Schmale: The Empire and its territorial states in the 17th and 18th centuries, Volume 10, LIT Edit. Münster, 2004, p. 69\. *Constantin von Wurzbach: Maria Anna Josepha. Nr. 219. In: Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich, vol. 7, Edit. L. C. Zamarski, Vienna 1861, p. 29\. ==External links== Category:1654 births Category:1689 deaths Category:17th-century House of Habsburg Category:17th- century women Category:Austrian princesses Category:Electoral Princesses of the Palatinate Category:Dames of the Order of the Starry Cross Category:Countesses Palatine of Neuburg Category:House of Wittelsbach Category:German royalty Category:Burials at the Imperial Crypt Category:Duchesses of Jülich Category:Duchesses of Berg Category:17th-century deaths from tuberculosis "