Search results
|
No page with that title exists You can create an article with this title or put up a request for it. Please search Wikipedia before creating an article to avoid duplicating an existing one, which may have a different name or spelling.
Showing below up to 20 results starting with #1.
View (previous 20) (next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).
No article title matches
Page text matches
- List of U.S. state capitals (5230 bytes)
53: | [[1905]] — [[1913]], [[1919]] — [[1920]] (wings added)
113: | [[1919]] — [[1932]]
193: | [[1919]] — [[1928]] (Legislative Building) - History of China (45919 bytes)
7: ...d redistribute crops, and to support specialist craftsmen and administrators: in short, civilization a...
28: ...ilosophy)|Legalism]] and [[Mohism]] were founded. After further political consolidation, seven promine...
48: *[[Rafe de Crespigny|de Crespigny, Rafe]]. 1977. The Ch’iang Barbarians and the Em...
49: ...licies and Strategies of the Later Han Empire''. Rafe de Crespigny. 1984. Faculty of Asian Studies, Au...
50: ...y history of the Three Kingdoms state of Wu'' by Rafe de Crespigny, in Asian Studies Monographs, New S... - Mary of Teck (14662 bytes)
1: ...0px|HSH Princess Victoria Mary of Teck, image by Lafayette of Bond Street, London. Copyright [[V&A]] M...
32: ...n]] <td>[[12 July]] [[1905]] <td>[[18 January]] [[1919]]<td> suffered from epilepsy, raised apart from h...
38: After her marriage, Princess May was now styled Her ...
40: ...attached to her children. The royal nanny looking after Princes Edward and Albert was found to be abus...
51: ...n Queen Victoria's exclusion of Edward from state affairs. However, the Prince of Wales was not of the... - Nancy Astor, Viscountess Astor (3681 bytes)
4: ...ilroad tycoon [[Chiswell Dabney Langhorne]] (1843-1919) and his wife, [[Anne Witcher Keene]]. Her sister...
8: ...quired by-election. Elected on [[November 28]], [[1919]], in December she became the second woman electe... - Alexandra Kollontai (3203 bytes)
7: ...ng the [[Zhenodtel]] or "Women's Department" in [[1919]]. This organization worked to improve the condit...
11: ...in]] managed to dissolve the Workers' Opposition, after which Kollontai was more or less totally polit... - Constance Georgine, Countess Markiewicz (3360 bytes)
8: ... the [[Ukraine]] and never returned. Shortly thereafter she joined [[James Connolly]]'s [[Irish Citize...
10: ...clined to take her seat on release from prison in 1919. Instead she joined her colleagues assembled in ...
12: ...Irish Minister for Community, Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs|Minster for the Gaeltacht]].
14: ...3 and June 1927 elections. She died in July 1927 after a short illness. - Millicent Fawcett (1226 bytes)
5: ...WSS]]), a position she held from [[1897]] until [[1919]]. - Rosa Luxemburg (23905 bytes)
2: ...uccessful [[revolution]] in Berlin in January, [[1919]]. The uprising was carried out against Rosa's or...
8: After her family moved to [[Warsaw]], Rosa attended ...
10: ...y. Her specialised subjects were ''Staatswissenschaft'' (the science of [[form of government|forms of ...
34: ...n]]s. Luxemburg herself took on the name "Junius" after [[Lucius Junius Brutus]], who was said to have...
38: ... as rulers of the new republic alongside the SPD, after the abdication of the [[Wilhelm II of Germany|... - Madalyn Murray O'Hair (6271 bytes)
1: ...Murray O<nowiki>'</nowiki>Hair''' ([[April 13]] [[1919]] - [[1995]]) was an [[United States|American]] [...
4: ...[[cryptography]] staff in [[Italy]], she began an affair with William J. Murray Jr. and bore him a chi...
24: ... about a threat to ''Touched by An Angel'' months after the program's last episode had been aired. - George Eliot (6014 bytes)
12: Two years after the death of Lewes, on [[May 6]], [[1880]] she...
47: * ''[[Early Essays]]'' (1919) - Mary Pickford (7523 bytes)
9: ...[1929]], but retired from films four years later, after a series of disappointing roles and the public...
13: ...ful business schedule and Fairbanks' extramarital affair with another woman led to a divorce in [[Janu...
28: * [[1919]]: A very astute business person, she founded [[U...
29: ...nced [[Ernst Lubitsch]] to direct her next film. After considering alternatives, they settle on ''[[R...
38: ...fe, Pickford suffered from alcoholism, which also afflicted her first husband and both of her parents.... - Amelia Earhart (9225 bytes)
8: ...ght her first [[airplane]], a [[Kinner Airstar]]. After her parents divorced, she sold the plane in 19...
10: One afternoon in April, 1928, she got a phone call while...
20: ... and after numerous stops in [[South America]], [[Africa]], the [[Indian subcontinent]], and [[Southea...
24: ...five nautical miles (9 km) over scattered clouds. After several hours of frustrating attempts at two-w...
34: ...IGHAR - The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery) suggests they may have flown along a s... - Marina Tsvetaeva (21885 bytes)
10: ...ver her. She, for her part, had had a tragic love affair before her marriage, and had not forgotten it...
12: ...na. The children began to run wild. This state of affairs was allowed to continue until June [[1904]] ...
14: ...[[Maximilian Voloshin]], whom Tsvetaeva described after his death in 'A Living Word About a Living Man...
18: ...'. At around the same time, she also conducted an affair with the [[lesbian]] poet [[Sofia Parnok]], w...
20: ...axe-like words: ''bourgeois, Junkers, leeches''". After the [[Russian Revolution of 1917|1917 Revoluti... - Virginia Woolf (9482 bytes)
13: ...ith the surge of Feminist criticism in the 1970s. After a few more ideologically based altercations, i...
32: *''Night and Day'' ([[1919]])
56: *''Modern Fiction'' ([[1919]])
62: * [http://acad.depauw.edu/%7Eafernald/passing_glances.html Passing Glances. A li... - Ruth Benedict (3045 bytes)
7: ... graduate studies at [[Columbia University]] in [[1919]], studying under [[Franz Boas]], receiving her [...
15: ...ernment for war-related research and consultation after U.S. entry into
27: She continued her teaching after the war, advancing to the rank of full [[profe... - Emmy Noether (2715 bytes)
10: ...se." She was finally admitted to the faculty in [[1919]]. A [[Jew]], Noether was forced to flee [[Nazi]]... - Jane Delano (3466 bytes)
1: ... York]], [[United States]] ? died [[April 15]], [[1919]] in [[Savenay]], [[Loire-Atlantique]], [[France]... - Mary Edwards Walker (4835 bytes)
2: ...[[November]], [[1832]] – [[February 21]], [[1919]]) was a versatile woman — a [[Feminism|fem...
10: ...Battle of Fredericksburg]] and in [[Chattanooga]] after the [[Battle of Chickamauga]]. Finally, she w...
12: ...] and head of an [[orphanage]] in [[Tennessee]]. After the war, she was recommended for the Medal of ...
20: After the war, she became a writer and lecturer, sup...
22: ... [[Congress of the United States|U.S. Congress]], after revising the standards for award of the medal ... - Josephine Baker (5957 bytes)
3: ...), born '''Freda Josephine McDonald''', was an [[African American]] dancer, actress and singer, somet...
7: ...ncing]] and appearing practically naked on stage. After a successful tour of [[Europe]], she returned ...
13: ... escaped from the chalet through a laundry chute. After the war, Baker was awarded the [[Croix de Guer...
17: ... lived with all of her children and an enormous staff in a castle in France. (Baker had only one child...
21: ...rough six marriages: foundry worker Willie Wells (1919, divorced), Pullman porter William Howard Baker (... - Ellen G. White (5403 bytes)
23: It was shortly after experiencing the [[Great Disappointment]] of [...
33: ...was D.M. Canright. The criticisms he makes in his 1919 book, "Life of Mrs. E.G. White Seventh-day Advent...
View (previous 20) (next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).