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data/retrieval_individual-407c4836-37e2-4f9f-8e9b-06706cc4440c.jsonl ADDED
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+ {"tstamp": 1722441568.6157, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722441567.3079, "finish": 1722441568.6157, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e7d52d0aadc94702b20e07a14e36ab57", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "when did the ottoman empire surrender in ww1", "output": [["when did the ottoman empire surrender in ww1", "Minority rights\n\nThe 1856 Congress of Paris paid special attention to the status of Jews and Christians in the Ottoman Empire. In Britain, William Gladstone made the massacres of Bulgarians by the Ottoman Empire a major campaign issue and demanded international attention. The Congress of Berlin in 1878 dealt with the status of Jews in Romania, especially, and also Serbia, and Bulgaria. On the whole, the 19th-century congresses failed to impose significant reforms.\nThe first minority rights were proclaimed and enacted by the revolutionary Parliament of Hungary in July 1849. Minority rights were codified in Austrian law in 1867.\nRussia was especially active in protecting Orthodox Christians and Slavic peoples under the control of the Ottoman Empire. However the Russian government tolerated vicious pogroms against Jews in its villages. Russia was widely attacked for this policy. By contrast there was little or no international outrage regarding the treatment of other minorities, such as black people in the southern United States before the 1950s when African colonies became independent.\nBefore the World War I, only three European countries declared ethnic minority rights, and enacted minority-protecting laws: the first was Hungary (1849 and 1868), the second was Austria (1867), and the third was Belgium (1898). In the pre-WW1 era, the legal systems of other European countries did not allow the use of European minority languages in primary schools, in cultural institutions, in offices of public administration and at the legal courts.\nMinority rights at the Paris Peace Conference of 1919"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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+ {"tstamp": 1722441568.6157, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722441567.3079, "finish": 1722441568.6157, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5289e5d21c2b4d949286103c399f1e19", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "when did the ottoman empire surrender in ww1", "output": [["when did the ottoman empire surrender in ww1", "Ottoman Empire in World War I\n\nThe Ottoman Empire was one of the Central Powers of World War I. It entered the war on 29 October 1914 with a small surprise attack on the Black Sea coast of Russia, which prompted Russia to declare war on 2 November 1914. Ottoman forces fought the Entente in the Balkans and the Middle Eastern theatre of World War I. The Ottoman Empire's defeat in the war in 1918 was crucial in the eventual dissolution of the empire in 1922.\nEntry into World War I\nThe Ottoman entry into World War I was the result of two recently purchased ships of its navy, still manned by their German crews and commanded by their German admiral, carrying out the Black Sea Raid on 29 October 1914. There were a number of factors that conspired to influence the Ottoman government and encourage them to enter the war. The political reasons for the Ottoman sultan's entry into the war are disputed, and the Ottoman Empire was an agricultural state in an age of industrial warfare. Also, the economic resources of the empire were depleted by the cost of the Balkan Wars of 1912 and 1913. The reasons for the Ottoman action were not immediately clear."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}