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- Jules Dumont d'Urville (2251 bytes)
4: ...Venus de Milo]] now stands in the [[Louvre]] in [[Paris]].
14: ...t d'Urville Station]] on Antarctica is also named after him.
16: ...s buried in the [[Cimetière du Montparnasse]], [[Paris]], France. - Timeline of the united states history 1990 to present (16426 bytes)
21: ...out with police and Dzhokhar was detained the day after.
29: After the Supreme Court announced the legalization o...
40: ...ween the U.S. and the U.N. and North Korea strain after the country tested missiles in various places.
83: ...oha, Qatar as part of a process to end the War in Afghanistan.
91: - Ionic order (6526 bytes)
1: ...es ruines plus beaux des monuments de la Grèce'' Paris, 1758 (Plate XX)]]
5: ...rechtheum]], Athens, [[421 BC]]-[[407 BC]]. The shaft everts gracefully at the base to meet the [[toru...
6: ...ee illustration, left'') which separates the [[shaft]] of the column from the [[Stylobate|stylobate]]...
8: ...rimentation, the number of hollow flutes in the shaft settled at 24. This standardization kept the flu...
14: ...s, to interpret the Ionic Order as matronly in comparison to the Doric Order, though not as wholly femini... - List of people by name: Af (1105 bytes)
4: *[[Viktor G. Afanasyev|Afanasyev, Viktor G.]], (1922-1994), Russian editor
5: *[[Viktor M. Afanasyev|Afanasyev, Viktor M.]], (born 1948), Russian astrona...
6: *[[Uthman ibn Affan|Affan, Uthman ibn]], (died 656), caliph
7: *[[Ron Affif|Affif, Ron]], (born 1965), musician
8: *[[Ben Affleck|Affleck, Ben]], (born 1972), US actor - Eleanor of Aquitaine (11927 bytes)
6: ...Aquitaine]], the [[Troubador]]. Eleanor was named after her mother and called ''Ali鮯r'', which means...
14: ...r militaristic aims would jeopardize the tenuous safety of his empire. A particularly poor decision wa...
20: When they passed through [[Rome]] on the way to Paris, [[Pope Eugene III]] tried to reconcile Eleanor a...
22: On [[May 18]], [[1152]], six weeks after her annullment, Eleanor married [[Henry II of ...
59: ...sh;1153|after1=[[Richard I of England|Richard I]]|after2=[[William, Count of Poitiers|William]]}} - Jeanne d'Albret (2474 bytes)
6: After the death of Francis and the accession of [[He...
14: ...ry to the king's sister Marguerite. She died in [[Paris]] two months before the wedding took place.
34: after=[[Henry IV of France|Henry III]]| - Marguerite de Valois (5364 bytes)
10: Just six days after the wedding, on St Bartholomew's Day, Catherin...
12: ...seized power over [[Agen]], one of her appenages. After several months of fortifying the city, the cit...
14: ... memoirs, which were published in [[1658]], years after her death. These writings consisted of a succe...
16: ...nri IV and Marie's children. Marguerite died in [[Paris]] on [[May 27]], [[1615]], and is buried in the C... - Mary I of Scotland (27810 bytes)
14: ...able. Females and female lines could inherit only after extinction of male lines.
19: ...gent until her own death in [[1560]]). Six months after her birth, in July [[1543]], the [[Treaties of...
26: ... it in her baby hand, and she grasped the heavy shaft. Then the Sword of State was presented by the [[...
31: The Treaties of Greenwich fell apart soon after Mary's coronation. The betrothal did not sit w...
44: ... Mary was also next in line to the English throne after her cousin, Queen [[Elizabeth I of England|Eli... - Denis Diderot (13048 bytes)
7: ...ve of the daily life of the philosophic circle in Paris.
10: ... the same date he published a free rendering of Shaftesbury's ''Inquiry Concerning Virtue and Merit'' ...
14: ...ered the case of a similar deprivation in the [[deaf and dumb]]. The ''Lettre sur les sourds et muets'...
31: ...government, had struck out from the proof sheets, after they had left Diderot's hands, all passages th...
40: ...t of the annual exhibitions of paintings in the [[Paris Salon]]. These reports are highly readable pieces... - Elizabeth of Russia (14144 bytes)
15: ...e Semyonovsky [[Leib Guard|Guards]] regiment, and after his banishment to [[Siberia]], minus his tongu...
19: ...ry one else. The merit and glory of that singular affair belong to Elizabeth alone. The fear of being ...
25: ...woman, with little knowledge and no experience of affairs, suddenly found herself at the head of a gre...
29: After abolishing the cabinet council system in favor...
31: ...placed at the head of foreign affairs immediately after her accession. He represented the anti-Franco-... - Catherine of Valois (1918 bytes)
3:
5: After the sudden death of Henry V in [[1422]], Cathe...
7: ... Their sons were given earldoms by King Henry VI after Catherine's death. Edmund would become the fa... - Diana, Princess of Wales (29391 bytes)
9: place_of_death=[[Paris]], [[France]]
15: ...a, Princess of Wales was a [[role model]] — after her death, there were even calls for her to be...
22: ...ter of the romance novelist [[Barbara Cartland]], after being named as the "other party" in the Earl a...
34: ...the most senior royal woman in the United Kingdom after the Queen and the Queen Mother.
38: ...uicide]] attempts. In one [[interview]], released after her death, she claimed that, while pregnant wi... - Marie Antoinette (40871 bytes)
1: ...l|Marie-Antoinette, painted by Wagenschon shortly after her marriage in [[1770]]]]
19: Two and half weeks after leaving [[Vienna]], Maria-Antonia was handed o...
32: ... absolutely devoted to Marie-Antoinette. Not long after meeting Th鲨se, Marie-Antoinette formed a dee...
36: ...nette's life changed suddenly at 3 o'clock in the afternoon of 10th May [[1774]] when King [[Louis XV]...
39: ...eims]] during the height of a bread shortage in [[Paris]]. Tradition would later state that it was at thi... - Constance Georgine, Countess Markiewicz (3360 bytes)
6: ...t at the Slade School in [[London]] and then in [[Paris]], where in [[1893]] she met and married [[Poland...
8: ... the [[Ukraine]] and never returned. Shortly thereafter she joined [[James Connolly]]'s [[Irish Citize...
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. - Margaret Thatcher (46377 bytes)
36: ...s not re-elected as an Alderman, a decision which affected his daughter deeply.
41: ...ervative candidate but fought in the [[safe seat|safe]] Labour seat of [[Dartford (UK Parliament const...
43: Thatcher had begun to look for a safe Conservative seat, and was narrowly rejected as ...
45: ...moved to the Shadow [[HM Treasury|Treasury]] Team after [[1966]].
52: ...vernment had lost control of [[monetary policy]]. After Heath lost the [[United Kingdom general electi... - Rosa Luxemburg (23905 bytes)
8: After her family moved to [[Warsaw]], Rosa attended ...
10: ...y. Her specialised subjects were ''Staatswissenschaft'' (the science of [[form of government|forms of ...
29: ... European Socialists congresses such as that in [[Paris]]. Along with the French socialist [[Jean Jaur賝...
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|... - Christabel Pankhurst (1631 bytes)
5: ...ore [[militant]] action for the suffragette cause after her daughter's arrest and was herself imprison...
7: ...Prisons (Temporary Discharge for Ill-Health) Act. After the end of [[World War I]], she ran as a Coali... - Flora Tristan (1707 bytes)
3: ...Flora Tristan''', born [[April 7]], [[1803]] in [[Paris, France]] - died [[November 14]], [[1844]] in [[B... - Emma Abbott (633 bytes)
2: ...orn in [[Chicago]] and studied in [[Milan]] and [[Paris]]. She had a fine [[soprano]] voice, and appeare... - Mary Cassatt (9047 bytes)
4: ...f the capitals of Europe, including [[London]], [[Paris]], and [[Berlin]].
6: ...masters]] on her own and in [[1866]] she moved to Paris.
8: ...sioned her to paint copies of paintings in Italy, after which she traveled about Europe.
10: ...major European museums, her style matured, and in Paris, she studied with [[Camille Pissarro]].
12: The jury accepted her first painting for the [[Paris Salon]] in [[1872]]. The Salon critics claimed th...
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