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- List of explorers (24013 bytes)
8: *[[Francisco de Almeida]] ([[16th century]] [[Portuguese]] naval explorer...
14: *[[Charles Albanel]] (1616-1696), Canada
21: ...] naval officer, several expeditions to the [[Canada|Canadian]] [[Arctic]]
23: ...]], first to sight the [[Pacific Ocean]], founded Darién, oldest surviving European settlement in the...
38: *[[Saint Brendan]] - [[Ireland|Irish]] [[abbot]] who sailed the [... - November 4 (10686 bytes)
2: ...p year]]s) in the [[Gregorian Calendar]], with 57 days remaining.
4: {{NovemberCalendar}}
7: ... captures [[Antwerp (city)|Antwerp]] (after three days the city was nearly destroyed).
20: * [[1921]] - The [[Sturmabteilung]] or SA is formally form...
35: ...�tien]] takes office as [[Prime Minister of Canada]]. - List of people by name: Ab (7347 bytes)
15: *[[Frank Abbandando|Abbandando, Frank]], (1910-1942), Mafia hitman
34: *[[Dimebag Darrell|Abbott, Darrell]], (1966-2004), US musician
55: *[[`Abdu'l-Bah, (died 1921), religious leader
114: ...], (circa 1000 BC), Biblical figure, third son of David
115: *[[Absalon]], (circa 1128-1201), Danish archbishop - List of people by name: Ag (3474 bytes)
20: *[[Amir Ageeb|Ageeb, Amir]], (1969-1999), Sudanese immigrant to Germany who died as a result of ...
21: *[[David Agmon|Agmon, David]], [[Brigadier General]] in the [[Israel Defen...
24: *[[Gianni Agnelli|Agnelli, Gianni]], (1921-2003), Italian industrialist
28: *[[David Hayes Agnew|Agnew, David Hayes]], (1818-1892), American surgeon - Hattie Caraway (2502 bytes)
9: ...t]] in [[1912]] and served in that office until [[1921]] when he was elected to the [[United States Sena...
15: ...tician [[Huey Long]] travelled to Arkansas on a 9-day campaign swing to campaign for her. - Constance Georgine, Countess Markiewicz (3360 bytes)
2: '''Constance Georgine Markiewicz''' ([[1868]]–July 1927), was an [[Ireland|Irish]] politician...
4: Born '''Constance Gore-Booth''', the daughter of [[baronet]] and explorer Sir Henry Gore-...
10: ...use of Commons of Southern Ireland]] elections of 1921.
14: ...ivil War]], and joined [[Fianna Fᩬ]] on its foundation in [[1926]]. She was not elected in the [[Iri... - Golda Meir (10143 bytes)
1: [[Image:Goldmeir at whitehouse.jpg|frame|right|Golda Meir was the fourth [[Prime Minister of Israel]]]...
2: ...nly man in the Cabinet." She is the first (and to date only) female [[Prime Minister of Israel]], the ...
6: ...ld. Her sisters' names were Shayna and Zipke. Golda looked up to Shayna. Her father left for the Unit...
10: ... Beginning when she was only eight years old, Golda oversaw the store for a short time each morning a...
12: ...up school for work and to marry an older man. Golda rebelled and ran away. She went to Denver, where... - Margaret Sanger (12025 bytes)
2: ...t Higgins Sanger''' ([[September 14]], [[1879]] – [[September 6]], [[1966]]) was an [[United Sta...
5: ...ollowed in subsequent years by a second son and a daughter who died in childhood.
7: ...on'', to poor women, Sanger repeatedly risked scandal and imprisonment by acting in defiance of the [[...
13: ...er founded the American Birth Control League in [[1921]]. The next year, she married oil tycoon James N...
24: ...h venereal diseases (which she contrasted with mandatory registration of those with infectious disease... - Anna Akhmatova (2156 bytes)
11: [[Nikolay Gumilyov]] was executed in [[1921]] for activities considered anti-Soviet; Akhmatov... - Isak Dinesen (2959 bytes)
3: ...''. Blixen wrote works both in [[Danish language|Danish]] and in [[English language|English]]. She i...
5: ... [[Croix de Guerre]] while serving with the [[Canada|Canadian]] army in the [[First World War]].
7: ...es on the husband's part, the couple separated in 1921, and the Baron returned to Denmark. The divorce w...
9: ... to publish several other works simultaneously in Danish and English, mostly collections of short stor...
15: * ''The Hermits'' (1907, published in a Danish journal under the name Osceola) - Murasaki Shikibu (2682 bytes)
1: ...#24335;部 ''Murasaki Shikibu'', c. [[973]]–c. [[1014 or c 1025]]) was a [[novelist]], [[po...
10: ...her mid fifties, which was quite old by Heian standards.
12: ...Tale of Murasaki: A Novel'' was written by [[Liza Dalby]], who is the only Westerner to have been trai...
15: * Dalby, Liza. ''The Tale of Murasaki: A Novel'' (Anch...
16: ...'The Tale of Genji'', published in 6 volumes from 1921-33. - Marina Tsvetaeva (21885 bytes)
3: ...ева) ([[October 9]], [[1892]] – [[August 31]], [[1941]]) was a [[Russia]]n [[p...
10: ...ed of Marina's poetic inclination. She wished her daughter to become a [[pianist]] and thought her poe...
20: ... for five years. During the [[famine]] one of her daughters died of starvation.
22: ...the style of a [[diary]] or journal begins on the day of Tsar Nicholas II's abdication in March 1917, ...
24: ...turn to, she had no way to support herself or her daughters. In [[1919]], she placed Irina in a state ... - Virginia Woolf (9482 bytes)
3: '''Virginia Woolf''' ([[January 25]], [[1882]] – [[March 28]], [[1941]]) was a [[United Kingdom...
9: ...one of the foremost [[Modernists]], though she disdained some artists in this category, such as [[Jame...
11: ...chievements and creativity are influential even today.
13: ...e Lighthouse" is a story on the Ramsay family holiday and the family members' interlocking tensions re...
17: ...s an authoritative examination of Woolf's life, updating the earlier biography by Woolf's own nephew, ... - Bessie Coleman (4340 bytes)
12: In [[September]] of [[1921]], she became a media sensation when she returned...
18: ...ed by 10,000 mourners. Many of them, including [[Ida B. Wells]], were prominent members of Black socie... - Marie Curie (5862 bytes)
2: ...łodowska-Curie''', [[November 7]] [[1867]] – [[July 4]] [[1934]]) was a [[Polish]] chemist ...
17: ...Langevin's grandson Michel later married her granddaughter H鬨ne Langevin-Joliot.
19: ...d in her and her husband's [[gold]] Nobel Prize Medals for the war effort.
21: In [[1921]], she did a tour of the [[United States]], where...
27: ... the year after Marie Curie's death. Her youngest daughter, [[Eve Curie]], wrote a biography on Curie ... - Emmy Noether (2715 bytes)
1: '''Emmy Noether''' ([[March 23]] [[1882]] – [[April 14]] [[1935]]) was one of the most tal...
6: ...s a teenager she was more interested in music and dancing.
8: ...]] refused to let her teach, and her colleague, [[David Hilbert]], had to advertise her courses in the
9: ...d Hilbert, "I do not see that the sex of the candidate is against
12: ...e results of Noether's theorem are part of the fundamentals of modern physics, which is substantially ... - Anna Maxwell (1551 bytes)
6: ...spital]] in [[Manhattan]], [[New York]] from 1892-1921.
8: ...ded her the [[Medaille de l'Hygiene Publique]] (Medal of honor for Public Health). - Jennie Kidd Trout (1706 bytes)
1: ...e a medical doctor, and was the only woman in Canada licensed to practice medicine until [[1880]], whe...
3: ... spelled '"Jenny'") moved with her parents to Canada in [[1847]], settling near [[Stratford, Ontario|S...
9: ...|Los Angeles]], [[California]], where she died in 1921. - Josephine Baker (5957 bytes)
3: ...sephine McDonald''', was an [[African American]] dancer, actress and singer, sometimes known as "The ...
5: .... Louis, Missouri|St. Louis]], [[Missouri]], the daughter of Eddie Carson and Carrie McDonald, she en...
7: ...tarred at the [[Folies Berg貥]], setting the standard for her future acts. Already a star, she perfor...
17: ...ces helped to integrate shows in [[Las Vegas, Nevada|Las Vegas]]. Nevertheless, her career was on a do...
21: ..., divorced), Pullman porter William Howard Baker (1921, divorced), Giuseppe Pepito Abatino (1926, public... - Aimee Semple McPherson (13395 bytes)
7: ...nal illness. (The age difference had caused a scandal in their small town, prompting the couple to elo...
13: ...ust 19, 1910. Aimee recovered and gave birth to a daughter, Roberta Star Semple, on September 17, afte...
19: ...13, she embarked upon a preaching career in [[Canada]] and the U.S. By June 1915 she had left home an...
23: ...she had started her own newspaper, named ''The Bridal Call'', for which she wrote many of the articles...
25: ...n for divorce, citing abandonment, was granted in 1921.
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