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- Commons:Template:Newpagelinksmain (1176 bytes)
5: ...wpagelinksmain|Look for Newpagelinksmain]] in the Commons, our repository for free images, music, sound, an...
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- Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom (35966 bytes)
7: ...arbados]], [[Belize]], [[Canada]], [[Grenada]], [[Jamaica]], [[New Zealand]], [[Papua New Guinea]], [[...
9: ...ited Kingdom|King George VI]] on [[6 February]] [[1952]]. She is the longest serving current Head of S...
14: ... spelled "Lilybet") made the cover of ''Time'' in 1929, at age three.]]
15: ...eet in [[Mayfair]], [[London]] on [[21 April]], [[1926]]. Her father was HRH [[George VI of the United...
23: ...e King won't leave under any circumstances". In [[1940]] Princess Elizabeth made her first broadcast, ... - Mary I of England (24813 bytes)
8: ...] from [[6 July]] [[1553]] (''[[de jure]]'') or [[19 July]] 1553 (''[[de facto]]'') until her death. M...
23: ...ved from the line of succession. Henry married [[Jane Seymour]], who died shortly after giving birth ...
26: ...alf-brother Edward and was chief mourner at Queen Jane's funeral. In turn, Henry agreed to grant her ...
33: ...Edward VI instead devised the Crown to the [[Lady Jane Grey]], a descendant of Henry VIII's younger si...
35: ...y was proclaimed Queen. All support for the Lady Jane vanished and Mary rode into London triumphantly... - Elizabeth I of England (34338 bytes)
16: ... sometime between the winter of [[1532]] and late January of [[1533]]. She was born in Greenwich Palac...
25: ...clared [[Lady Jane Grey]] to be his heiress. Lady Jane ascended the throne, but was [[Deposition_(poli...
33: Elizabeth was crowned on [[15 January]] [[1559]]. There was no [[Archbishop of Can...
49: ...[[1566]]. The [[British House of Commons|House of Commons]] threatened to withhold funds until the Queen ag...
51: ...line would be the [[Lady Catherine Grey]], [[Lady Jane Grey]]'s sister. An even more distant possible ... - Anne of Great Britain (22303 bytes)
10: ...ence of a [[Protestant]] heir, the Roman Catholic James II could attempt to return to the Throne. It w...
15: ...cond daughter of James, Duke of York, (afterwards James II) and his first wife, the [[Lady Anne Hyde]]...
17: ..., declared her firm adherence to [[Anglicanism]]; James II continued to send her Catholic books and es...
19: ...nvention Parliament]] assembled and declared that James had abdicated the realm when he attempted to f...
22: ...gh was a Jacobite (that is, one who believed that James II was the legitimate monarch), Mary II dismis... - Victoria of the United Kingdom (38571 bytes)
7: ...]]) ([[24 May]] [[1819]] – [[22 January]] [[1901]]) was [[British monarchy|Queen of the United K...
12: ...rn in Kensington Palace, London on [[24 May]] [[1819]].
20: ...glish sounding name, ''Windsor''. (In the early [[1960s]] an [[Order-in-Council]] partially reversed t...
27: ...surrection (see [[Rebellions of 1837]]), and in [[Jamaica]], the colonial legislature had protested Br...
35: ...ruary]] [[1840]] at the [[Chapel Royal]] in [[St. James's Palace]]; four days before, Victoria granted... - Diana, Princess of Wales (29391 bytes)
6: date_of_birth=[[1 July]], [[1961]] |
8: date_of_death=[[31 August]], [[1997]] |
11: ...From her marriage in [[1981]] to her divorce in [[1996]] she was styled '''Her Royal Highness The Prin...
13: ...onal distress riveted the world for much of the [[1990s]], spawning biographies, magazine articles and...
15: ...1981]] until her death in a [[car accident]] in [[1997]], Diana was arguably the most famous woman in ... - Nancy Astor, Viscountess Astor (3681 bytes)
1: ...tor''' ([[May 19]], [[1879]] – [[May 2]], [[1964]]) was a socialite politician and a member of t...
4: ...road tycoon [[Chiswell Dabney Langhorne]] (1843-1919) and his wife, [[Anne Witcher Keene]]. Her sister...
6: ...stor, 1st Viscount Astor]] and grandson of [[John Jacob Astor III]].
8: ... seat, since the first elected female member in [[1918]], [[Constance Markiewicz]], had chosen not to ...
10: ...to Hitler about his treatment of the [[Jew]]s. In 1940 she urged Prime Minister [[Neville Chamberlain]... - Kim Campbell (10679 bytes)
7: | 19th
10: | [[June 25]] - [[November 4]], [[1993]]
19: | [[March 10]], [[1947]]
31: ...of Canada]] from [[June 25]] to [[November 4]], [[1993]]. Though she was not popularly elected, she re...
35: ...1983]], and Campbell married [[Howard Eddy]] in [[1986]]. - Constance Georgine, Countess Markiewicz (3360 bytes)
2: ...tance Georgine Markiewicz''' ([[1868]]–July 1927), was an [[Ireland|Irish]] politician and [[nat...
6: ...ist boy scouting movement [[Fianna ɩreann]] in [[1909]].
8: ...ment, and she was released under the amnesty of [[1917]].
10: ...use of Commons of Southern Ireland]] elections of 1921.
12: ...[[Cabinet Minister]]. She held this record until 1979 when [[Mᩲe Geoghegan-Quinn]] was apointed to ... - Margaret Thatcher (46377 bytes)
6: |[[4 May]] [[1979]] <br>
7: – [[28 November]] [[1990]]
10: |[[James Callaghan]]
16: |[[13 October]] [[1925]]
27: ...nister of the United Kingdom]] from [[1979]] to [[1990]], the only woman [[as of 2005]] to serve in th... - The Valiant Five (3833 bytes)
1: ...''' were five [[Canada|Canadian]] women who, in [[1927]] asked the [[Supreme Court of Canada]] to answ...
8: ...(one of two women first elected to the [[House of Commons of Canada]], and
13: ...pointed to the Senate. Among other reasons, until 1970 the Senate approved divorces.
15: .... Canada (Attorney General)'' <nowiki>[</nowiki>[[1928]]<nowiki>]</nowiki> S.C.R. 276, The Supreme Cou...
20: .... Canada (Attorney General)'' <nowiki>[</nowiki>[[1930]]<nowiki>]</nowiki> A.C. 124 (P.C.)), the Privy... - Asia (16910 bytes)
50: ...The [[Pacific Ocean]] islands of [[Taiwan]] and [[Japan]].
82: ...ole of [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]] and [[Azerbaijan]].
107: | $2,195
130: ...ere is no reliable data for Iraq or North Korea). Japan is the world's second largest economy, and Nor...
154: ...s a major source of food in Asia, particularly in Japan. - Canada (35540 bytes)
88: ... 1497. French claims began with explorations by [[Jacques Cartier]] (from 1534) and [[Samuel de Champl...
98: ... [[Newfoundland and Labrador]], which joined in [[1949]].
100: ...en the British government passed the [[Canada Act 1982]].
102: ... to two [[referendum|referenda]] held in 1980 and 1995, with votes of 60% and 50.6% against independen...
111: ...site/english/maps/historical/territorialevolution/1927/1]); this claim is not universally recognized. ... - United Arab Emirates (10825 bytes)
2: ...imah]], [[Sharjah]] and [[Umm al-Quwain]]. Before 1971, they were known as '''the Trucial States''' or...
42: | [[2 December]], [[1971]]
61: ...m the United Arab Emirates. They were joined in [[1972]] by [[Ras al-Khaimah]].
71: ...]]'s oil output has fluctuated due to war). Since 1973, the UAE has undergone a profound transformatio...
79: *[[Fujairah]] - Republic of Ireland (25543 bytes)
34: GDP_PPP = $164,190 million |
40: ...ty<br>[[21 January]] [[1919]]<br>[[6 December]] [[1921]] |
49: footnotes = <sup>1</sup> Prior to [[1999]]: [[Irish pound]]
58: ...d Kingdom]] of the state as per the [[Ireland Act 1949]]. Today while ''Republic of Ireland'' is an ac...
60: ...h Free State]]", a name that was retained until [[1937]]. - Guatemala (8475 bytes)
36: <br> 119/km?
67: ...successive successful democratic elections from [[1985]] to date. The most recent democratic election ...
95: The signing of the peace accords in December [[1996]], which ended 36 years of civil war, removed a...
96: In [[1998]], [[Hurricane Mitch]] caused relatively little...
112: The Peace Accords signed in December [[1996]] provide for the translation of some official ... - Pakistan (74854 bytes)
3:
21: population_estimate = 162,419,946 |
39: ...the [[United Kingdom]]<br />[[1947-08-14]]<br />[[1956-03-23]] |
51:
62: ...o the Pakistani province of [[Punjab, Pakistan|Punjab]] with diffuse tributaries to the south and east... - United Kingdom (37269 bytes)
26: population_census = 58,789,194 |
52: ...ingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland'' in 1927.<br><sup>6</sup> Official estimate provided by ...
58: ...922 to form an independent state (in which, until 1949, the King of the United Kingdom was also King o...
64: ...a description out of date in the Irish case since 1922. An alternative, the ''Islands of the North Atl...
71: ...the UK. The nomenclature of the UK was changed in 1927 to recognise the departure of most of Ireland, ... - New Hampshire (23166 bytes)
40: ... highest winds ever recorded on Earth: 231 mph in 1934 at the [[Mount Washington (New Hampshire)|Mount...
58: ...] was governor of the state from [[1983]]–[[1988]]. [[List of New Hampshire Governors]].
62: ...House of Representatives and the British House of Commons. Based on 2000 Census data, this averages out to ...
88: ...], nine small islands best known as the site of a 19th-century art colony founded by poet [[Celia Thax...
97: ...ring dollar value (Source: US Economic Census for 1997, Manufacturing, New Hampshire). These tradition... - Space (10661 bytes)
55: ...logists first began to study in the middle of the 19th century, and it is now thought by those concern...
103: {{commons|Category:Space}}
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