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  1. Mary I of England (24813 bytes)
    3: ...ight|thumb|220px|'''Mary I''' <br><small>Queen of England and Ireland</small>]]
    8: ...cases reversed by her successor, [[Elizabeth I of England|Elizabeth I]].
    13: ...was created Princess of Wales, even though he was deeply disappointed that his wife had again failed t...
    15: ...[[English language|English]]. Other studies included [[Greek language|Greek]], [[science]], and [[mus...
    17: ...h England. A marriage treaty was signed; it provided that the Princess Mary should marry either Franc...
  2. Elizabeth I of England (34338 bytes)
    2: ...right|220px|'''Elizabeth I''' <br><small>Queen of England and Ireland</small>]]
    7: ...d during a period of great religious turmoil in [[England|English]] history.
    9: ...tal misalliances. Like her father [[Henry VIII of England|Henry VIII]], she was a writer and poet. She gran...
    11: ... and seven [[baron|baronies]] in the [[Peerage of England]], and one barony in the [[Peerage of Ireland]], ...
    16: ...on after [[Edward VI of England|Prince Edward]] under the [[English Act of Succession|Act of Successio...
  3. Mary II of England (12093 bytes)
    2: ...umb|right|175px|'''Mary II''' <br><small>Queen of England, Scotland and Ireland</small>]]
    8: ...William III]], who became the sole ruler upon her death. Popular histories usually know the joint reig...
    11: ...harles II]]; her maternal grandfather, [[Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon]], served for a lengthy pe...
    13: ...aking as his second wife the Catholic [[Mary of Modena]], also known as Mary Beatrice d'Este.
    15: ...Mary became betrothed to the Protestant [[Stadtholder]] and [[Prince of Orange]], William III. William...
  4. William I of England (8753 bytes)
    2: ...England.jpg|thumb|right|180px|''King William I of England'']]
    7: ...in [[France]], William succeeded to the throne of England by right of conquest by winning the [[Battle of H...
    9: ... armour]] that was invented generations after his death.
    14: ...y, William finally secured control of Normandy by defeating the rebel Norman barons at [[Caen]] in the...
    16: He married [[Matilda of Flanders]], against the wishes of the [[Pope Leo IX|pope...
  5. Culture of England (4178 bytes)
    1: ...t to which other cultures have influenced life in England.
    6: ...ndefinable, although Nikolaus Pevsner attempted a definition in his 1956 book The Englishness of Engli...
    8: Originating with cave painting, it has developed over millennia to several current movement...
    12: ...ool of portrait painting. The rich ecclesiastical decoration of English churches was, in great measure...
    14: ...uring the English Commonwealth and the subsequent democratisation of society meant that the patronage ...

Page text matches

  1. List of explorers (24013 bytes)
    6: *[[Diogo de Azambuja]] ([[15th century]] [[Portuguese]] explo...
    7: *[[Pêro de Alenquer]] ([[15th century]] [[Portuguese]] explo...
    8: *[[Francisco de Almeida]] ([[16th century]] [[Portuguese]] naval ...
    9: *[[Afonso de Albuquerque]] ([[16th century]] [[Portuguese]] na...
    10: *[[Antonio de Abreu]] ([[16th century]] [[Portuguese]] explorer...
  2. King Arthur (22450 bytes)
    1: ...h [[Medieval]] Welsh texts often call him ''amerauder'' ("[[emperor]]").
    5: ...his power and the extent and kind of power he wielded continues to rage.
    7: ...Geoffrey Ashe and Leon Fleuriot, have argued for identifying Arthur with a certain [[Riothamus]], "Kin...
    9: ...ing the historical career of Artorius makes this identification unlikely, as there seems to be little ...
    11: ...eves that Arthur is a half-forgotten Celtic deity devolved into a personage (citing sometimes a suppos...
  3. Christopher Columbus (44177 bytes)
    1: ...ached the [[Americas]] on October 12th [[1492]] under the flag of [[Castile|Castilian]] [[Spain]]. He ...
    2: ...Christopher_columbus_2.jpg|thumb|200px|Image provided by [http://classroomclipart.com Classroom Clip A...
    3: ... time accepted that the earth was round. The main debate was over whether it would be possible to get ...
    5: ...first voyage from all of these: less than two decades later, the existence of America was known to the...
    7: Columbus landed in the [[Bahamas]] and later explored much of th...
  4. David Livingstone (4684 bytes)
    8: ...though she was pregnant &ndash; but returned to [[England]] with their children.
    12: ... In particular, Livingstone was a proponent of trade and missions to be established in central Africa.
    14: ...rned to England to try to garner support for his ideas, and to publish a book on his travels. At this ...
    17: ... sent to central and east Africa at his urgings ended in disaster, with nearly every missionary dying ...
    22: ... which feeds the [[Congo River]], Livingstone decided that this river was in fact the "real" [[Nile]].
  5. Middle Colonies (4101 bytes)
    1: ...erant. They had more [[agriculture]] than the New England colony. The Middle Colonies were also known as th...
    3: ...ortraits painted. Homes in the country could be made of logs and chinked with moss or mud.
    5: ...amily drank [[milk]] and [[whiskey]], which was made out of corn, rye, wheat, and barley. The whiskey...
    7: ...rnut tree bark; red came from the roots of the madder herb; brown came from the hulls of black walnuts...
    9: ...inting and publishing were also very important trades.
  6. Industrial Revolution (30001 bytes)
    1: ...t of all-metal machine tools in the first two decades of the nineteenth century enabled the manufactur...
    3: ...wth of the [[internal combustion engine]] and the development of [[Electric power|electrical power gen...
    5: ...red to the [[Neolithic revolution]], when mankind developed [[agriculture]] and gave up its [[nomad|no...
    10: ...he accompanying development of international [[trade]], creation of [[financial market]]s and accumula...
    12: ...h often imposed tolls and [[tariff]]s on goods traded among them.
  7. Steel (28384 bytes)
    3: ...iron, but is also more [[brittle]]. One classical definition is that steels are iron-carbon alloys wit...
    5: ... [[plasticity (physics)|plastically]] formed (pounded, rolled, etc.).
    8: ...l><sub>2</sub></small>&mdash; [[Pyrite]]. Iron oxide is a soft [[sandstone]]-like material with limite...
    11: ...similarly soft and metallic but can dissolve considerably more carbon (as much as 2.04 wt% carbon at 1...
    13: ...ry similar unit cell structure to austenite, and identical chemical composition. As such, it requires...
  8. Puritan (15882 bytes)
    1: ...p of radical [[Protestants]] which developed in [[England]] after the [[Reformation]].
    4: ...list]]": Puritanism was a movement rather than a denomination.
    5: ...at "Puritan" was most often used by opponents and detractors of the group, rather than by the practiti...
    8: ...ervient to politics. Persecuted under [[Mary I of England]] ("Bloody Mary"), Protestants like [[Thomas Cart...
    10: ...ble|biblical]] supremacy, and they shared, to one degree or another, a belief in the [[priesthood of a...
  9. China (38909 bytes)
    1: ...e [[3rd century BC]] to protect the north from raiders on horseback.]]
    3: ...nding on one's point of view, modern China can be described as a single [[civilization]] or multiple c...
    5: ...of China]] in [[1912]]; however the next four decades were marred by warlordism, the [[Second Sino-Jap...
    7: ...utes on [[Chinese reunification]]/[[Taiwan independence]] issues.
    14: ...of China at the centre of her known world, surrounded by lesser tributary states.
  10. November 4 (10686 bytes)
    7: ...)|Antwerp]] (after three days the city was nearly destroyed).
    8: ...Moscow]] China Town taken by [[Russia]]n troops under command of [[Dmitri Mikhailovich Pozharski|Dmitr...
    9: ...e [[Mary II of England]] marries [[William III of England|William, Prince of Orange]]. They would later be...
    10: ...[[Kingdom of Sardinia|Sardinia]], which soon expanded to become [[Italy]].
    12: ...bombard a [[United States|Union]] supply base and destroy millions of dollars in material.
  11. Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom (35966 bytes)
    2: ...den Jubilee]] in [[2002]], wearing her Canadian Orders.)]]
    9: ...f state in the world, after King [[Bhumibol Adulyadej]] of Thailand.
    14: ...eft|"Princess Lilibet" (here spelled "Lilybet") made the cover of ''Time'' in 1929, at age three.]]
    15: ... of her paternal great-grandmother [[Alexandra of Denmark|Queen Alexandra]] and grandmother Queen Mary...
    17: ...t the time of her birth, she was third in the [[Order of succession to the British throne|line of succ...
  12. Adela of Normandy (2741 bytes)
    5: ...her of both [[Stephen of England|Stephen, King of England]] and [[Henry of Blois]], [[Bishop of Winchester]...
    7: ... She was the favorite sister of King [[Henry I of England]]; they were probably the youngest of the Conquer...
    9: ...Stephen reluctantly left to join the [[First Crusade]], along with his brother-in-law [[Robert Curthos...
    11: Adela and Stephen's children were:
    15: # [[Stephen I of England|Stephen of Blois]]
  13. Melisende of Jerusalem (16880 bytes)
    1: ...al, possibly Melisende herself, from the [[Melisende Psalter]]]]
    3: '''Melisende''' ([[1105]] - [[September 11]], [[1161]]) was [[...
    5: ... was named after her paternal grandmother, Melisende of Montlhery, wife of Hugh I, [[Count of Rethel]]...
    9: ...reginam, cui jure hereditario competebat." Melisende was no mere regent-queen (for her son Baldwin III...
    11: ...hter as a capable successor to himself and Melisende enjoyed the support of the ''[[Haute Cour of Jeru...
  14. Agnes of Courtenay (6051 bytes)
    3: ...]], and it seems that they waited until Fulcher's death to marry. Agnes bore Amalric two children, fir...
    5: .... Despite the annulment, their two children were declared legitimate.
    7: Amalric ascended the throne after the marriage was annulled. Agne...
    11: ...s to maintain her own household, which later included several nobles as clients, such as [[Amalric II ...
    13: ...s an opponent of Raymond III of Tripoli she persuaded Baldwin IV not to allow him to enter the kingdom...
  15. Sibylla of Jerusalem (11497 bytes)
    1: ...Melisende of Jerusalem|Queen Melisende]] had provided an example of successful rule by a queen regnant...
    5: ... former Queen [[Melisende of Jerusalem]], who founded the convent of St. Lazarus in Bethany for her si...
    9: ...t cousin of Sibylla, arrived in [[1177]] and demanded to have the princess married to one of his own v...
    11: ...tween the princess and his prisoner, Saladin demanded a large ransom, which Baldwin himself could not ...
    19: ...he accord between Jerusalem and Egypt. Baldwin IV deposed Guy as regent in [[1183]] and attempted to h...
  16. Isabella of Jerusalem (7928 bytes)
    5: ...V of Toron]] in [[1183]] (the contract had been made several years earlier, as a sort of thanks to Hum...
    7: ... pointed out to him. Thereupon Saladin gave out orders throughout his army that no attack should be di...
    9: ...er Sibylla's position for the entire period. In order to prepare for the future after Baldwin IV, Isab...
    11: ...s settlement, both Sibylla and Isabella were considered equally entitled to succeed.
    13: ...ion. Now, that both Baldwin IV and Baldwin V were dead, it was easier to resurrect that legal grounds ...
  17. Isabella of Castile (4156 bytes)
    2: ...ain|Ferdinand V]] as co-ruler. She was also the ''de-facto'' co-ruler of her husband's dominions. This...
    5: ...-granddaughter to [[Nuno Alvares Pereira]], Count de Barcelos and his wife Leonor Alvim, Countess of B...
    8: ...Her final set of grandparents were [[Afonso, Duke de Braganza]], a son of John I of Portugal by Inez P...
    10: ... [[Henry the Navigator]], and his wife [[Isabella de Bragan硝].
    19: As a reaction, Isabella was despised by opposers to Franco.
  18. Eleanor of Aquitaine (11927 bytes)
    3: ...he was [[Queen consort]] of both [[France]] and [[England]] in her lifetime.
    6: ...], [[Duke of Aquitaine]], and her mother was Ʈor de Chⴥllerault, the daughter of Aimeric I, Vicomte...
    8: ... and richest of the provinces that would become modern [[France]], when her brother, William Aigret, d...
    10: ...uld remain independent of France, and Eleanor's eldest son would be both King of France and [[Dukes of...
    12: ...paign, with her, the Queen of France, as their leader.
  19. Catherine de' Medici (7484 bytes)
    1: ...horoscope_catherine_de_medici.jpg|thumb|Catherine de' Medici]]
    3: ...r lived in [[France]] under the name '''Catherine de M餩cis''', was Queen of France as the wife of Ki...
    5: ...t [[Marseilles]], to the duke of Orl顮s, whose elder brother was alive at the time, but who would bec...
    11: ...il 1]], [[1560]] she named as chancellor [[Michel de l'H?al]], who advocated a policy of conciliation.
    13: ...upport was the [[corset]], with laces and stays made of whalebone or metal. They forcefully shrank wom...
  20. Mary I of England (24813 bytes)
    3: ...ight|thumb|220px|'''Mary I''' <br><small>Queen of England and Ireland</small>]]
    8: ...cases reversed by her successor, [[Elizabeth I of England|Elizabeth I]].
    13: ...was created Princess of Wales, even though he was deeply disappointed that his wife had again failed t...
    15: ...[[English language|English]]. Other studies included [[Greek language|Greek]], [[science]], and [[mus...
    17: ...h England. A marriage treaty was signed; it provided that the Princess Mary should marry either Franc...

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