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  1. Rio de Janeiro (14538 bytes)
    1: ...eiro. For the state with the same name, see [[Rio de Janeiro (state)]].''
    3: [[Image:Rio_de_Janeiro-Ipanema_Beach.jpg|thumbnail|250px|right|Ipanema beach]]
    4: [[Image:Redentor.jpg|thumb|250px|[[Cristo Redentor]]]]
    5: ...lrg.jpg|thumb|250px|A NASA satellite image of Rio de Janeiro]]
    7: ...] celebration. It also has the biggest forest inside an urban region, called "Floresta da Tijuca". The...
  2. History of China (45919 bytes)
    2: ...any were eventually assimilated into the Chinese identity. These cultural and political influences fro...
    7: ...ultural center, where the first villages were founded; the most archaeologically significant of those ...
    11: ...s such as [[Sanxingdui]] and [[Erlitou]] show evidence of a [[Bronze Age]] [[Civilization]] in [[Chin...
    14: ...ished during the [[Xia Dynasty]], and that this model was perpetuated in the successor [[Shang Dynasty...
    15: ...ming_tombs.jpg |thumb|left|Ming Tombs. Image provided by [http://classroomclipart.com Classroom Clipar...
  3. History of philosophy (13862 bytes)
    1: ...premise]]s and approaches, examples of which include [[rationalism]] (through [[logic]]), [[empiricism...
    7: ...odern" is a word with more varied use, which includes everything from [[Post-Medieval]] through the sp...
    10: ...ents were [[Anaximenes of Miletus]] and [[Anaximander]] ("All is air").
    12: ... parts), the [[Eleatic School|Eleatics]] [[Parmenides]] and [[Zeno of Elea|Zeno]] (All is One and chan...
    14: ... the subjects and methods of debate became highly developed.
  4. Marie Antoinette (40871 bytes)
    1: [[Image:MarieAntoinette1769-70.jpg|thumbnail|Marie-Antoinette, painted by Wagenschon shortly a...
    4: ...ur of Saint John the Evangelist. A court official described the new baby as "a small, but completely h...
    6: ...f her closest sister, Maria-Carolina (two years older) and brother, Max, (one year younger.) Her other...
    7: ...een years before Antoinette's birth. She was considered one of the most brilliant political figures in...
    9: ...ld like as a reward, Mozart is said to have responded by saying he would like the hand of the Empress'...
  5. Margaret Thatcher (46377 bytes)
    1: {| border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="right...
    9: |'''PM Predecessor:'''
    25: |[[Order of the Garter|Order of the Garter]]<br>Life Barony
    27: ... Kesteven" -->''', [[Order of the Garter|LG]] [[Order of Merit|OM]] [[Privy Council|PC]] [[Royal Socie...
    29: ...he Conservative leadership in [[1975]]. She was undefeated at the polls, winning the [[United Kingdom ...
  6. Susan B. Anthony (3977 bytes)
    1: ...hony - Age 28 - Project Gutenberg eText 15220.jpg|thumbnail|200px|Susan Brownell Anthony, aged 28]]
    2: ...wnell Anthony - Project Gutenberg eText 15220.jpg|thumbnail|200px|Susan Brownell Anthony]]
    3: ...an [[United States|American]] [[civil rights]] leader who, along with [[Elizabeth Cady Stanton]], led ...
    5: ...chester, New York]]. While in Rochester, she attended the [[Unitarian Church]].
    7: ...she herself taught in various schools. In the decade preceding the outbreak of the [[American Civil Wa...
  7. Annie Besant (4275 bytes)
    1: ...:Annie Besant - Project Gutenberg eText 13715.png|thumbnail|right|250px|'''Annie Besant''' activist, socialis...
    7: ... for the first time (in [[1893]]). Thereafter she devoted much of her energy not only to the Theosophi...
    9: ...y in [[1907]] upon the death of the previous president [[Henry Steel Olcott]].
    11: ...ed Hindu opinion more than former Theosophical leaders. This was a clear reversal of policy from Blav...
    13: Soon after Besant's inheritance of the presidency, in [[1909]], Leadbeater discovered [[Jiddu Kr...
  8. Christabel Pankhurst (1631 bytes)
    1: [[image:Cpankhurst.jpg|thumbnail|250px|right|'''Christabel Pankhurst''']]
    5: ...al Party (UK)|Liberal Party]] meeting by shouting demands for voting rights for women. She was arreste...
    7: ...te for Parliament in the Smethwick riding but was defeated. Leaving her native England, she moved to t...
    9: She was made a Dame Commander of the British Empire in 1936.
  9. Emma Abbott (633 bytes)
    1: [[Image:EmmaAbbott.jpg|thumbnail|300px|right|Emma Abbott]]
    2: ... in the [[United States]], where she enjoyed considerable reputation. In [[1873]] she married E. J. W...
  10. Christine de Pizan (6645 bytes)
    1: ...g eBook 12254.jpg|thumbnail|right|250px|Christine de Pizan, showing the interior of an apartment at th...
    2: ...d female roles; although Pisan in fact was merely describing a standard feudal practice whereby the wi...
    4: ...loyed by various ducal and Royal households, in order to support her three children.
    5: ...the ''[[Romance of the Rose]]'' written by [[Jean de Meung]].
    9: ...r, and with three children depending on her. This determined her to have recourse to [[literature | le...
  11. Grace Hopper (7469 bytes)
    1: ...rogrammer]] for the [[Mark I Calculator]] and the developer of the first [[compiler]] for a computer p...
    3: ... at [[Yale University]], where she received an MA degree in the same two subjects in [[1930]] and in [...
    5: ...d from the Navy, but she continued to work on the development of the Mark II and the Mark III Calculat...
    7: ...auchly]] Computer Corporation and joined the team developing the [[UNIVAC I]]. In the early [[1950s]] ...
    9: ...machine code]] or in languages close to machine code, such as the [[assembler]]s of the time. It is fa...
  12. Florence Nightingale (15657 bytes)
    1: ...lorence Nightingale - Project Gutenberg 13103.jpg|thumbnail|right|250px|A young '''Florence Nightingale''']]
    3: ...'The Lady with the Lamp'', was the pioneer of modern [[nurse|nursing]]. Each year, the [[Internation...
    7: ...s named after the city of her birth, as was her older sister (named [[Parthenope]] for the old city th...
    9: ...gions of the poor and indigent. She announced her decision to her family in [[1845]], evoking intense ...
    11: ...ed the support of [[Charles Villiers]], then president of the [[Poor Law Board]]. This led to her act...
  13. Mary, the mother of Jesus (30135 bytes)
    8: ... figure of Mary, and the centuries of Marian cult derived from the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Chris...
    11: ...t|250px|thumbnail|[[Gabriel (archangel)|Gabriel]] delivering the [[Annunciation]] to Mary. Painting by...
    13: ... strangers (Luke 2:6, 7). But as the inn was crowded, Mary had to retire to a place among the cattle.
    15: ...rs only one event in the history of Jesus is recorded: his going up to [[Jerusalem]] when twelve years...
    17: ... and other women (John 19:26). Mary cradling the dead body of her son is a common motif in art, calle...
  14. Fanny Blankers-Koen (14562 bytes)
    1: ...hile 3rd place finisher [[Shirley Strickland]] is depicted on the far left.]]
    7: ...by the [[International Association of Athletics Federations]] (IAAF).
    11: ...ar she was a sports talent, but she could not decide which sport to pick. A swimming coach advised her...
    13: ... Record in the 800 [[metre|m]]. Fanny Koen soon made the Dutch team, although as a sprinter, not a mid...
    17: ...y 2, 1940, a week before the Netherlands were invaded by German troops.
  15. Human skeleton (3903 bytes)
    1: [[Image:Skeleton.jpg|right|thumbnail|250px|A human skeleton]]
    2: The '''human skeleton''' is made of [[bone]]s, some of them joined together, suppo...
    4: ...ones that fuse together during growth. These include the bones in the [[skull]] and the [[spine (anato...
    6: There are 6 bones (three on each side) in the [[middle ear]] that articulate only with ...
    11: ...sary for protection of [[vital organ]]s and is needed by the [[muscle|muscles]] for movement.
  16. Glass (26176 bytes)
    1: The materials definition of a '''glass''' is a uniform [[amorphous...
    3: ...ed the word ''glaes'' to describe [[amber]], recorded by [[Roman Empire|Roman]] historians as ''glaesu...
    5: ...glasses in common use as a building, container or decorative material.
    9: ...d with very smooth and impervious surfaces. These desirable properties lead to a great many uses of gl...
    13: ...ommon glass''' is mostly amorphous [[silicon dioxide]] ([[Silicon|Si]][[Oxygen|O]]<sub>2</sub>), which...
  17. Calligraphy (20084 bytes)
    2: ...ecorative [[writing]]. A style of calligraphy is described as a ''hand''.
    4: ...d [[epigraphy]]. Epigraphy is a branch of the broader study of ancient handwriting in more general ter...
    8: ...dating back to the earliest day of history, and widely practiced throughout [[China]] to this day. Alt...
    10: ...34269;, all meaning "the way of writing") is considered an important art in [[East Asia]] and the most...
    12: ...he Prime Minister [[Li Si]] drew up an official index of characters and unified the written form for t...
  18. Statue (1162 bytes)
    1: [[Image:Ireland-Charlie_Chaplin_Statue.jpg|thumbnail|right|Charlie Chaplin Statue]]
    3: ...s far from exhaustive and can be/needs to be expanded.''
    5: ...as Gandhi|Mahatma Gandhi]]. Many statues are intended as [[public art]], exhibited outdoors or in publ...
    7: ...horse's hooves are supposed to indicate how the rider met his end, is not true. [http://www.straightdo...
    9: A small statue is defined as being a '''statuette'''.
  19. Oboe (5230 bytes)
    1: [[Image:Oboe.jpg|thumbnail|50px|right|Modern Oboe]]
    3: ...a descendant of the [[shawm]]. The word "oboe" is derived from the French word ''hautbois'', meaning "...
    7: ...often produce a nasal (often out-of-tune) and strident tone that is difficult to blend with other inst...
    13: ...gether with the flute/recorder it is one of the oldest [[woodwind]] instruments.
    15: [[Image:Baroque_oboe.jpg|right|thumbnail|60px|Baroque Oboe, Stanesby Copy]]
  20. Horn (instrument) (19243 bytes)
    2: ... developed in France in about 1650 from the ''cor de chasse'' or hunting horn, and has been known as t...
    6: ...sic)|harmonic series]], facilitated by its small, deep [[mouthpiece]], giving it its characteristic "m...
    12: ... needed to play and the other could be free to guide his steed. The only way to change the pitch was ...
    14: ...ype of horn, called the [[natural horn]] in the modern literature.
    16: ...rmonic series, and there were then three valves added to it. Using these three valves, the player cou...

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