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  1. Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom (35966 bytes)
    20: ...ost recently during her [[2004]] state visit to [[France]] to commemorate the centenary of the [[Enten...
    29: ...7]], when she accompanied her parents to [[South Africa]]. On her 21st birthday she made a broadcast t...
    33: ...t-great-grandmother. They are also both descended from [[Christian IX of Denmark]] (she being a great-...
    38: ...] [[1996]]) [[Diana, Princess of Wales|Lady Diana Frances Spencer]] ([[1961]]–[[1997]]); married...
    50: ...rn [[10 March]] [[1964]]), married ([[19 June]] [[1999]]) [[Sophie, Countess of Wessex|Sophie Rhys-Jones...
  2. Diana, Princess of Wales (29391 bytes)
    9: place_of_death=[[Paris]], [[France]]
    11: ... Wales|HRH The Prince Charles, Prince of Wales]]. From her marriage in [[1981]] to her divorce in [[19...
    15: From the time of her [[engagement]] to the Prince of...
    22: ...h; a great-grandmother was the American heiress [[Frances Work]] — she was also a descendant of ...
    27: [[Image:princessdi.jpg|frame|right]]
  3. Margaret Thatcher (46377 bytes)
    27: ... was the [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom]] from [[1979]] to [[1990]], the only woman [[as of 20...
    29: ...y]] task force to retake the [[Falkland Islands]] from [[Argentina]] in the [[Falklands War]].
    31: ...and]], and increased wealth inequalities. However from the mid 1980s a period of sustained economic gr...
    33: ...d Monetary Union]]. Her leadership was challenged from within and she was forced to resign in [[1990]]...
    36: ...hire]] in eastern [[England]]. Her father was [[Alfred Roberts]], who ran a grocers' shop in the town ...
  4. Republic of Ireland (25543 bytes)
    40: established_dates = From [[United Kingdom|UK]] by treaty<br>[[21 January...
    49: footnotes = <sup>1</sup> Prior to [[1999]]: [[Irish pound]]
    58: ... "Republic of Ireland" in order to distinguish it from the island of Ireland as a whole. The name ''Re...
    60: ...dence in [[1922]] it became known as the "[[Irish Free State]]", a name that was retained until [[1937...
    67: ...in and Ireland]]. From [[1874]], but particularly from [[1880]] under [[Charles Stewart Parnell]], the...
  5. Pakistan (74854 bytes)
    39: established_dates = From the [[United Kingdom]]<br />[[1947-08-14]]<br /...
    62: ...nions of the divided Greek empire of [[Bactria]] (from the areas of the [[Panjshir province|Panjshir]]...
    64: The Kushan kingdom stretched from modern-day [[Uzbekistan]] to northwestern India...
    69: ... by the [[Mughals]] from [[1526]] until [[1739]]. From 1739 until the early [[19th century]] the entir...
    72: ... the British by the Muslim leader [[Tipu Sultan]] from 1749 to 1799 left the remnants of the Mughal Em...
  6. United Kingdom (37269 bytes)
    10: ...t mon droit]] (Royal motto)<br>([[French language|French]]: God and my right)''<sup>2</sup></small> |
    56: ...r, although there is also a nominal frontier with France in the middle of the [[Channel Tunnel]]. The ...
    62: ...d). This political usage of "Great Britain" dates from the personal union of the Crowns of Scotland an...
    64: The [[British Isles]] is a term frequently used to refer to the [[archipelago]] whic...
    71: ...nce]] of [[Ulster]], immediately opted out of the Free State and to remain in the UK. The nomenclature...
  7. New Hampshire (23166 bytes)
    36: ... the most famous of all [[state motto]]s: "[[Live free or die]]".
    51: ... modern [[Republican Party]] by [[Amos Tuck]] and friends. New Hampshire grew as a hotbed of [[Aboliti...
    58: ...ther [[John H. Sununu]] was governor of the state from [[1983]]&ndash;[[1988]]. [[List of New Hampshir...
    60: ...ampshire)| Executive Council]] that is a holdover from the [[Governor's Council]] of the Colonial era....
    62: ...House of Representatives and the British House of Commons. Based on 2000 Census data, this averages out to ...
  8. Space exploration (14877 bytes)
    3: ==From fiction to fact==
    11: From a spaceflight perspective, the definition of sp...
    15: ... The first [[organisms]] launched into space were fruit flies and corn seeds aboard a U.S.-launched V2...
    22: The [[Canadian Space Agency]] (CSA or, in French, the ASC) is the government department respon...
    56: ...rs Polar Lander and the Mars Observer launched in 1999 and 1993 respectively which cost millions of doll...
  9. Carnivorous plant (44834 bytes)
    29: ...e leaves are quite clearly evolutionarily derived from a simple
    46: rolled-leaf tube, and protects it from rain. Possibly because of this improved
    52: pitted with areolae, which are [[chlorophyll]]-free patches through which light can penetrate.
    54: ...once inside, tire themselves out trying to escape from these false
    63: that project from the base of the operculum over the entrance to ...
  10. Mars (27704 bytes)
    4: '''Mars''' is the fourth [[planet]] from the [[Sun]] in the [[solar system]]. It is name...
    6: ...#x2642; (a circle with a small arrow pointing out from behind it), is a stylized representation of the...
    15: ...en summer and winter, giving rise to Earth-like [[frost]] and large [[cirrus cloud]]s [http://marsrove...
    18: ...tic field would have helped to protect the planet from [[cosmic radiation]]. Other explanations have a...
    22: Amongst the findings from the Opportunity rover is the presence of [[hema...
  11. Christianity (47078 bytes)
    6: ...term "Christ" to describe Jesus, which is derived from the [[Greek language|Greek]] translation for "M...
    8: ...lly grouped into three main branches, which split from one another in disputes over doctrine:
    14: ... but not [[Restorationism]]) derive their beliefs from the conclusions reached by the Council of Nicea...
    29: ...stles and other followers claimed that Jesus rose from the dead, and set out to [[preach]] the new mes...
    35: * via [[Egypt]] into [[North Africa]], [[Sudan]] and [[Ethiopia]]
  12. Thomas More (15893 bytes)
    2: ...ic offices, including that of [[Lord Chancellor]] from [[1529]] to [[1532]]. More coined the word "[[...
    7: ...o Lincoln's Inn while he considered joining the [[Franciscan]] order. Perhaps because he judged himse...
    12: From [[1510]] to [[1518]], More served as one of the...
    14: ... British House of Commons|Speaker of the House of Commons]]. He later served as high steward for the unive...
    19: ...Christian humanist in continental Europe, and his friend [[Erasmus of Rotterdam]] dedicated his master...
  13. Congress of the United States (41315 bytes)
    1: [[Image:Uscongress.gif|right|frame|Seal of the Congress.]]
    13: ... renewed every two years; two members are elected from each [[U.S. state]] by popular vote to serve si...
    15: ...sional district]]s. Only the non-voting delegate from Puerto Rico (known as [[Resident Commissioner o...
    17: ...e Canadian House of Commons, the British House of Commons, and the German [[Bundestag]], approximately 15 p...
    33: ...nt, a [[conference committee]] made up of members from both houses must work out a compromise acceptab...
  14. United States Senate (35505 bytes)
    1: [[Image:Us senate seal.png|framed|[[Seal of the United States Senate|Seal of th...
    2: ...rtisan atmosphere that is somewhat more insulated from public opinion than the House. The Senate has s...
    12: ...egislation into the senatorial saucer to cool it (from the The House of Representatives)". <!--Sources...
    14: ...er several southern states declared [[secession]] from the Union, culminated in the South's defeat and...
    21: ...es, the Senate comprises 100 members. The senator from each state with the longer tenure is known as t...
  15. Formula One (29650 bytes)
    9: ...or [[Mexico]], [[India]], [[Russia]] and [[South Africa]] have reinforced the sport's "worldwide" imag...
    16: ...e [[List of Formula One Grands Prix]] for results from past seasons and individual races.''
    18: Historically, the Formula One series evolved from the European [[Grand Prix motor racing]] (''q.v...
    24: ...rity, and it quickly and permanently replaced the front-mounted engine model.
    35: ...xpiration and assured them a share of the profits from the sale of television rights, bringing an end ...
  16. Adolf Hitler (51456 bytes)
    11: ...hancellor of Germany|chancellor]]) of [[Germany]] from [[1933]] to his death. He was leader of the [[N...
    15: He led Germany from the depths of post-[[World War I]] defeat to be...
    20: ...z]] in the province of [[Upper Austria]], not far from the [[German Empire|German]] border in what was...
    24: ...s was impossible since the Jews had been expelled from Graz in the [[15th century]] and were not allow...
    25: ... Hitler's profession his family moved frequently, from [[Braunau]] to [[Passau]], [[Lambach]], [[Leond...
  17. American Revolutionary War (40738 bytes)
    10: ...t a time, were generally reluctant to go very far from home, and would often come and go as they saw f...
    15: ...f these ever set foot in America. The war was far from Britain's greatest concern at the time. [[Loyal...
    19: ...cisive, though disastrous for the French economy. France's standing army at the time is estimated to h...
    23: ...lack slaves used the war as a chance to escape to freedom.
    31: ...regiment]]s of British regulars (about 4,000 men) from his headquarters in Boston, but the countryside...
  18. Indianapolis, Indiana (25903 bytes)
    29: ... the Governor's mansion. It was used as a market commons for over six years. Although an expensive Governo...
    31: ...ed in 1836, but Indiana went bankrupt in [[1839]] from the loans taken out under the aforementioned bi...
    33: ...ections enlarged the town. The population soared from just over 8,000 in 1850 to more than 169,000 by...
    35: ...in the [[1890s]]. The state government offered a free supply of [[natural gas]] to factories that wer...
    37: ...social organization in the city during the period from [[1921]] through [[1928]]. The Klan continued ...
  19. Salt Lake City, Utah (41550 bytes)
    4: ...nearby [[Great Salt Lake]], the city is separated from the lake's shore by [[marsh]]es and [[mudflat]]...
    15: ...an isolated area to practice their religion, away from the persecution they had faced in the East. Upo...
    22: ...Salt Lake]]. A railroad was connected to the city from the Transcontinental Railroad in [[1870]] makin...
    24: ...bating inner-city decay. The city lost population from the [[1960s]] through the [[1980s]], but recove...
    31: ...jor construction projects were initiated. Local [[freeway]]s were expanded and repaired and a [[light ...
  20. Russia (28007 bytes)
    6: ...tage. This influence is notable, but is still far from that of the former Soviet Union.
    13: ... The Slavs constituted the bulk of the population from the [[8th century]] onwards and slowly assimila...
    17: ...ded the [[Russians |Russian people]] in the north from the [[Belarusians]] and [[Ukrainians]] in the w...
    23: ...unctional Christian state on the Eastern European frontier, allowing it to claim succession to the leg...
    27: ...Terrible]], the first leader designated [[Tsar]] (from the Roman ''[[Caesar (title)|Caesar]]'', also w...

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