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- Anna of Austria (1601-1666) (1994 bytes)
2: ... Mazarin|Cardinal Mazarin]] served as France's [[Religious minister|chief minister]].
6: ...o the prime minister, [[Jules Mazarin]], who was believed to be her lover.
12: ...of the central figures in [[Alexandre Dumas]]' novel, ''[[The Three Musketeers]]''.
Page text matches
- Anna of Austria (1601-1666) (1994 bytes)
2: ... Mazarin|Cardinal Mazarin]] served as France's [[Religious minister|chief minister]].
6: ...o the prime minister, [[Jules Mazarin]], who was believed to be her lover.
12: ...of the central figures in [[Alexandre Dumas]]' novel, ''[[The Three Musketeers]]''. - Vermont (39851 bytes)
9: Capital = [[Montpelier, Vermont|Montpelier]] |
30: HighestElev = 1,339 |
31: MeanElev = 305 |
32: LowestElev = 29 |
38: .... The state capital is [[Montpelier, Vermont|Montpelier]], while the largest city is [[Burlington, Ver... - Ammonius Hermiae (1773 bytes)
1: ...her]], and the son of [[Hermias]] or Hermeias, a fellow-pupil of [[Proclus]]. He taught at [[Alexandri...
6: ...ction on fate was published separately by J. C. Orelli, ''Alex. Aphrod., Ammonii, et aliorum de Fato q...
9: ...ation and scholia, at Leiden, 1621, at Helmstadt, 1666, and at Paris, 1850. - St. Peter's Basilica (17805 bytes)
2: ...of Rome]]. Tradition holds that his [[tomb]] is below the baldochino and [[altar]]. [[Pope]]s have b...
4: ...place at St. Peter's. The basilica also holds a relic of the ''[[Cathedra]] Petri'', the episcopal th...
8: ...ich had previously been a cemetery for pagans as well as Christians.
10: ...entury]] [[Pope Sixtus IV]] had the [[Sistine Chapel]] started nearby.
12: ...After Michelangelo's death his student [[Giacomo della Porta]] continued with the unfinished portions ... - List of painters (54090 bytes)
10: *[[Michelangelo Buonarroti]], ([[1475]]-[[1564]]), Italian [[scu...
15: *[[Raffaello Santi|Raphael]], ([[1483]]-[[1520]]), [[Italy|Italian]] [[paint...
18: *[[Peter Paul Rubens]], ([[1577]]-[[1640]]), Belgian painter
38: *[[Mariotto Albertinelli]] ([[1474]]-[[1515]])
43: *[[Else Alfelt]] ([[1910]]-[[1974]]) - Robert Hooke (5017 bytes)
4: ...ations of plant cells reminded him of [[monk]]s' cells. Also in 1665 he gained appointment as Professo...
6: ...fter the [[Great Fire of London|Great Fire]] in [[1666]]. He worked on designing the [[Royal Greenwich O...
12: ...hor escapement represented a major step in the development of accurate watches. The balance spring a...
14: ...multiple lenses (usually three - an eyepiece, a field lens and an objective). While he did give much a...
16: ...t [[Gregorian telescope|Gregorian]] [[reflecting telescope]] and the discovery of the first [[binary s... - John Locke (14749 bytes)
3: ...], which includes [[David Hume]] and [[George Berkeley]]. Locke is perhaps most often contrasted with ...
6: ... college at the time was [[John Owen]], vice-chancellor of the university and also a [[Puritan]]. Alt...
8: ...]], [[Robert Hooke]] and [[Richard Lower]]. In [[1666]], he met [[Anthony Ashley Cooper, 1st Earl of Sh...
10: ..., Locke resumed his medical studies, under the tutelage of [[Thomas Sydenham]]. Sydenham had a major i...
12: ...to undergo an operation (then life-threatening itself) to remove the cyst. Shaftesbury survived and pr... - Henry Morgan (5671 bytes)
2: ... [[August 25]], [[1688]]) was a [[privateer]] of Welsh birth, who made a name in the [[Caribbean]] as ...
4: ...New Providence]] (Santa Catalina), and when Mansfield was captured and killed by the Spanish shortly a...
6: ...ned to their base at [[Port Royal]], Jamaica, to celebrate.
8: ...which convinced the governor to shift his cannon, eluded the enemy's guns altogether and escaped in sa...
10: ...rilliant exploit was tarnished by the habitual cruelty of Morgan's crews. - Thomas Hobbes (26163 bytes)
2: ...homas Hobbes: detail from a portrait by John Michael Wright ([[National Portrait Gallery]], London)]]
6: ...matters, providing an account of human nature as self-interested cooperation. He was a contemporary of...
12: ... Devonshire|Earl of Devonshire]]), and began a lifelong connection with that family.
14: ...obbes believed that Thucydides' account of the [[Peloponnesian War]] showed that democratic government...
16: ...Marin Mersenne]]. From [[1637]] he considered himself a philosopher. - List of philosophers (79981 bytes)
9: *[[Jacob Friedrich von Abel]], (1751-1829)
10: *[[Pierre Ab鬡rd]] (or ''Peter Abelard''), (1079-1142){{fn|C}}{{fn|O}}{{fn|R}}
14: *[[Isaac Abrabanel|Isaac ben Judah Abravanel]], (1437-1508){{fn|C}}{{fn|R}}
15: *[[Judah Leon Abravanel|Judah ben Isaac Abravanel]], (1460?-1535?){{fn|C}}{{fn|R}}
17: *[[Uriel Acosta]], (1585-1640) - Sikhism (31029 bytes)
2: ...metaphysics, [[guru]] ideal, and [[bhajan]]s) as well as [[Sufi|Sufi Islam]].
4: ...s being practised by either religion and hence a well-known saying of [[Guru Nanak]] is, "There is no ...
6: ... five baptised Sikhs were named Panj Pyare (Five Beloved Ones), who in turn baptised the Guru at his r...
8: ... gurus are also known to have documented their revelations.) This is one of the few scriptures in the ...
14: ...dash; that is, by moderating egoism and sensuous delights, to live in a balanced worldly manner, and b... - Theories and sociology of the history of science (16096 bytes)
3: ...tion of large-scale patterns and trends in the development of [[science]], and asking questions about ...
7: ...us. Earlier, most natural philosophers worked in relative isolation, due to the difficulty and slownes...
9: ...ce on the peer review and publishing process, as well as the internal disciplinary limitations to the ...
11: ...founded in [[Naples]] [[1560]] by [[Giambattista della Porta]]. The Academy had an exclusive membershi...
13: ...d as an institution of the government of France [[1666]], meeting in the King's library. The [[Akademie ... - Comedy of manners (2474 bytes)
3: ...]) and ''Le Misanthrope'' (''The Misanthrope'', [[1666]]).
7: ...oung Ones (TV series)|The Young Ones]] and [[Seinfeld]] have brought the comedy of manners to the mode...
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