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  1. Ancient Greek theatre (7531 bytes)
    7: ...impossible to know for sure how fertility rituals developed into tragedy and comedy.
    9: ...tors and commentators. Thespis is therefore considered the first Greek "[[actor]]."
    11: == Golden Age ==
    13: ...ddition, the subject matter of the plays had expanded so that rather than just Dionysus, they treated ...
    15: ...lso during this period, Greek theatre spread outside of Athens. Athens' Dionysia remained the most im...
  2. Sofia Gubaidulina (8325 bytes)
    1: ...931]]) is a [[Russia]]n-[[Tatar]] [[composer]] of deeply religious music.
    3: ...ervatory, graduating in 1954. In [[Moscow]] she undertook further studies at the Conservatory with Nik...
    7: In the mid-1970s Gubaidulina founded Astreja, a folk-instrument improvisation group w...
    11: ...). The two works together form a "diptych" on the death and resurrection of Christ, her largest work t...
    15: ...f a bond...restoring the legato of life. Life divides man into many pieces...There is no weightier occ...
  3. Sackbut (3802 bytes)
    1: ... differentiate the historic instrument from its modern counterpart. Increasing interest in [[authenti...
    4: ...dern tenor trombone, the tenor sackbut has a considerably smaller [[bore]], and a smaller, more conica...
    7: ...eir longer slides, have a hinged handle on the slide stay, which is used to reach the long positions.
    10: ...s equivalent to A at A=466. Other period sources describe an alto in D, tenor in A, and bass in D; so...
    13: ...rized by a more delicate, vocal timbre than the modern instrument. Its dynamic flexibility lends itse...
  4. Africa (35389 bytes)
    8: ...with its capital [[Carthage]], corresponding to modern-day [[Tunisia]].
    18: ...ent of the continent, the idea of ''Africa'' expanded with their knowledge.
    24: ...rom the main mass of the Earth's surface. It includes within its remarkably regular outline an area, o...
    26: ...6,000 km (16,100 miles) and the absence of deep indentations of the shore is shown by the fact that Eu...
    33: Africa is home to the [[cradle of Humankind|oldest inhabited territory]] on earth, with the [[huma...
  5. Hathor (11883 bytes)
    1: ...age:Ancient_eygpt-1.jpg|thumb||170px|Clipart provided by <br> [http://classroomclipart.com Classroom C...
    4: ...athor was an ancient goddess, worshipped as a cow-deity from at least [[2700 BC]], during the 2nd dyna...
    6: ...the fate of the newborn, and [[midwife|midwives]] delivering them.
    8: ...aid she arose from from Ra's tears, and thus was identified as the ''[[Eye of Ra]]''.
    10: ...n [[hippopotamus]], which the Egyptians also considered quite motherly creatures, and sometimes as an ...
  6. Agathon (3124 bytes)
    1: ...lato's ''[[Symposium (Plato)|Symposium]],'' which describes the banquet given to celebrate his obtaini...
    4: ...rlesques his flowery style, representing him as a delicate and effeminate youth, and it may be only fo...
    6: ...t in manly thought and vigor. With him begins the decline of tragic art in its higher sense.
  7. Boston, Massachusetts (36071 bytes)
    9: founded = [[September 17]], [[1630]] |
    11: ...Thomas Menino]] ([[United_States_Democratic_Party|Dem]]) |
    18: density = 4,696.9|
    25: ...tened from [[Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.|Oliver Wendell Holmes]]' phrase ''The Hub of the Universe''), ...
    27: ...has a population of approximately 5.8 million residents. [[Greater Boston]] is one of the top-ten larg...
  8. Johann Sebastian Bach (31106 bytes)
    5: .... Some of his most famous works include the [[Brandenburg Concertos]], [[The Well-Tempered Clavier]], ...
    7: ...e distant relatives, while his sons [[Wilhelm Friedemann Bach]], [[Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach]] and [[J...
    13: ...te library, at which point the elder brother demanded to know how Sebastian had come to learn them.
    17: ...; Bach was equally at home talking with organ builders and with performers.
    19: ...essive accomplishment in his day, especially considering that he was the first in his family to finish...
  9. Ancient music (3386 bytes)
    2: '''Ancient music''' is [[music]] that developed in literate cultures, replacing [[prehisto...
    4: ...usic]]. For [[Arab music]], [[ancient history]] ended in [[622 CE]].
    6: ...Ajax (play)|Ajax]]''), a few [[hymn]]s by [[Mesomedes]] of [[Crete]] ([[second century AD]]), and the ...
    8: ...nsidered to continue its "ancient" style and includes much [[Asian music]], [[Jewish music]], [[Greek ...
    12: ...ved both [[Iraqi wars]], and attempts are being made to play a replica of it as part of a touring [[or...
  10. Greek theatre (7531 bytes)
    7: ...impossible to know for sure how fertility rituals developed into tragedy and comedy.
    9: ...tors and commentators. Thespis is therefore considered the first Greek "[[actor]]."
    11: == Golden Age ==
    13: ...ddition, the subject matter of the plays had expanded so that rather than just Dionysus, they treated ...
    15: ...lso during this period, Greek theatre spread outside of Athens. Athens' Dionysia remained the most im...
  11. Musical notation (19883 bytes)
    3: ...is shown using the [[diatonic scale]], with [[accidental]]s to allow notes on the [[chromatic scale]],...
    8: There is some evidence that a kind of musical notation was practiced ...
    10: .... An example of a complete composition &mdash; indeed the ''only'' surviving complete composition usi...
    12: ...but its few surviving fragments have not yet been deciphered.
    16: == Standard notation described ==
  12. Opera (25153 bytes)
    7: ... the visual spectacle on the stage, which is considered an important part of the performance. Finally,...
    9: ...arely reaching vocal maturity until the third decade, and sometimes not until middle age. Male singer...
    11: Traditional opera consists of two modes of singing: [[recitative]], the dialogue and plo...
    13: ...s such film scores can in some sense even be considered both the heirs and the competitors of [[grand ...
    20: ...ical [[Greek tragedy|Greek drama]], part of the wider revival of antiquity characteristic of the [[Ren...
  13. Igor Stravinsky (26622 bytes)
    1: ...ombinations and classical forms. His oeuvre included everything from symphonies to [[piano]] miniatur...
    10: ... St. Petersburg and dominated by his father and elder brother, Stravinsky's early childhood was a mix ...
    12: ...d<nowiki>]</nowiki> them all to hell". (He succeeded: the 1913 premi&egrave;re of ''Le sacre du print...
    14: ...learn and explore art, literature, and life. This desire manifested itself in several of his Paris col...
    17: ...rtner until his death, was his second wife [[Vera de Bosset]].

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