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- Mexico (27255 bytes)
2: ...red by the [[United States]] to the north, and [[Belize]] and [[Guatemala]] to the southeast. It is th...
15: national_motto =''Sufragio efectivo, No reelecci
16: ...sh language|Spanish]]: ''Effective suffrage, no reelection)'' |
64: ...the height of their civilization in the tenth and eleventh centuries.
68: ...], independence from Spain was declared, by [[Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla]], a Catholic priest in the sm... - List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
19: *[[Melchior Adam|Adam, Melchior]], (died 1622), German divine and biographer...
27: *[[Adamnan]], (625-704), Irish religious leader
38: *[[Ansel Adams|Adams, Ansel]], (1902-1984), photographer
46: *[[Evangeline Adams|Adams, Evangeline]], (1868-1932), astrologer
61: *[[Michael Adams|Adams, Michael]], (1971-), chess player - Victoria of the United Kingdom (38571 bytes)
2: ...ueen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Empress of India]]
7: ...]] of the [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland]], she was also the first monarch to use the t...
9: ...narch of the [[House of Hanover]]; her successor belonged to the [[House of Windsor|House of Saxe-Cobu...
12: ... I of Belgium|Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfield]] and widow of [[Karl of Leiningen|Karl, Prince ...
16: ...ion for a child monarch, Victoria would have been eligible to govern the realm as would an adult. In o... - Mary of Teck (14662 bytes)
3: ...of York|Duchess of York]]. In her own right she held the title of a [[Princess]] of Teck in the Kingd...
5: ...wels built up over her years as queen are now priceless.
9: ...ther was [[Her Royal Highness]] [[Princess Mary Adelaide of Cambridge]], the third child and the young...
11: ...velled throughout Europe, visiting their various relatives and staying in [[Florence]], [[Italy]], for...
13: ... fail. During [[World War I]], the Swiss Embassy helped pass letters from Mary to her aunt, who lived ... - Rosa Luxemburg (23905 bytes)
2: ...my and freelance right-wing [[militia]]s collectively called the [[Freikorps]], which were sent in by ...
6: ...child of the [[Jew]]ish wood trader/timber trader Eliasz Luxemburg III and his wife Line (maiden name:...
8: ...m [[1886]]. The Proletariat had been founded in [[1882]], twenty years before the Russian workers' parti...
14: ...ndependent Poland. Luxemburg denied the right of self-determination for nations under [[socialism]], w...
19: ...aim was to improve the number of seats the party held in the [[Reichstag]]. - Emmeline Pankhurst (1950 bytes)
1: [[Image:Emmeline_Pankhurst.jpg|frame|Emmeline Pankhurst]]
3: ...truggle for votes for women in the period immediately preceding [[World War I]].
5: ... by her daughters, [[Christabel Pankhurst|Christabel]] and [[Sylvia Pankhurst|Sylvia]], both of whom w... - Sylvia Pankhurst (3170 bytes)
3: '''(Estelle) Sylvia Pankhurst''' ([[May 5]], [[1882]] - [[September 27]], [[1960]]) was a campaigner ...
5: ...ights. Her sister, [[Christabel Pankhurst|Christabel]], would also become an activist.
7: ...ristabel Pankhurst|Christabel]] and her mother Emmeline. But in contrast to them she retained her inte...
9: ...p the [[East London Federation of Suffragettes]] (ELFS), which over the years evolved politically and ...
11: ...ment as the Bolsheviks, the CP(BSTI) dissolved itself into the larger, official Communist Party. - Mary Cassatt (9047 bytes)
4: ... that valued education. Her parents believed travel was a way to learn, and before she was 10 years o...
6: ...1861-1865). Tired of patronizing instructors and fellow male students, and the slow pace of her course...
8: ...copies of paintings in Italy, after which she traveled about Europe.
14: ...dow, though, she knew she was not alone in her rebellion against the Salon. "I used to go and flatten ...
18: ...moving to Paris in [[1877]]. Her sister died in [[1882]], but her mother regained her health, and Cassat... - Ouida (1938 bytes)
1: ... ''[[pen name]]'' of the [[England|English]] [[novelist]] '''Marie Louise de la Ram饧''.
3: ...". During her career, she wrote more than 40 [[novel]]s. For many years she lived in [[London]], but ...
5: ...lthough successful, she did not manage her money well and died in poverty on [[January 25]], [[1908]],...
9: * ''Bimbi, Stories for Children'' (1882)
13: * ''Findelkind'' (??) [http://www.gutenberg.net/etext/1367 ... - Christine de Pizan (6645 bytes)
2: ...anded female roles; although Pisan in fact was merely describing a standard feudal practice whereby th...
4: When she was 24 her husband ɴienne du Castel died, and Pizan became a court writer employed by...
9: ...urse to [[literature | letters]] as a means of livelihood.
11: ...poets, and between that time and 1405, as she herself declares, she composed some fifteen important wo...
13: ...rance]] (1396), took her elder son, [[Jean du Castel]] (b. 1384), and reared him as his own; the boy, ... - Virginia Woolf (9482 bytes)
3: '''Virginia Woolf''' ([[January 25]], [[1882]] – [[March 28]], [[1941]]) was a [[United ...
7: ...oomsbury]], forming the initial kernel for the intellectual circle known as the [[Bloomsbury group]]. ...
9: ... Press]]. She is hailed as one of the greatest novelists of the twentieth century and one of the forem...
11: ...consciousness]], the underlying psychological as well as emotional motives of characters, and the vari...
13: ...ser to the prose poem than to the plot-centred novel. Her last and most ambitious work, "Between the A... - Emmy Noether (2715 bytes)
1: ...ith penetrating insights that she used to develop elegant abstractions which she formalized beautifull... - Florence Nightingale (15657 bytes)
3: .... Each year, the [[International Nurses Day]] is celebrated on her birth anniversary.
7: ... A brilliant and strong-willed woman, Florence rebelled against the expected role for a woman of her s...
9: ...on" who followed the armies; they were equally likely to function as [[cooks]] or [[prostitutes]]. Ni...
11: ...roved medical care in the infirmaries and immediately engaged the support of [[Charles Villiers]], the...
19: ...htingale's pioneering work in Crimea and in the field of nursing, and Nightingale became a key advisor... - Jennie Kidd Trout (1706 bytes)
3: ..., [[Scotland]], Jennie (whose name is variously spelled '"Jenny'") moved with her parents to Canada in...
7: ...treatments for women involving "galvanic baths or electricity." For six years, she also ran a free di...
9: ...d later moved to [[Los Angeles, California|Los Angeles]], [[California]], where she died in 1921. - Clara Schumann (3372 bytes)
3: ...ist]]s of the [[Romantic music|Romantic era]] as well as a composer.
7: ...ncluding those of Bach, Mozart, and Beethoven as well as those of Robert Schumann and Brahms.
9: ...ium]] at [[Frankfurt am Main]], a post which she held until [[1892]], and in which she contributed gre...
11: ...or of her husband's works for [[Breitkopf and H䲴el]].
14: ...ge V of Hanover, Germany who declared them a "marvelous, heavenly pleasure." - Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (8386 bytes)
1: [[Image:Hpb.jpg|thumb|right|Helena Blavatsky]]
2: ...1]] [[London]], [[England]]), better known as '''Helena Blavatsky''' or '''Madame Blavatsky''' was the...
5: ... of Old Russia, and apparently encouraged her to believe she had supernatural powers at a very early a...
7: ...ife, but H.P. Blavatsky continued on to Cairo herself. It was in Cairo that she formed the Societe Spi...
9: ... of how they work rather than performing them herself. - Sarah Bernhardt (3531 bytes)
4: ...cated in French Catholic convents. To support herself, she combined the career of an actress with that...
6: ... Europe and in the [[United States]]. She soon developed a reputation as a serious dramatic actress, e...
8: ...ng, painting and sculpting herself, as well as modelling for [[Antonio de La Gandara]]. She was also t...
10: ...ath in 1889 at age 34, was quickly collapsed, largely due to the young actor's dependence on morphine.
12: ... in all. The latter included ''Sarah Bernhardt ࠂelle-Isle'' ([[1912]]), a film about her daily life ... - Grace Kelly (6610 bytes)
1: [[Image:AmazinGrace.jpg|thumb|300px|Grace Kelly (1929–1982).]]
3: '''Grace Patricia Kelly''' ([[November 12]], [[1929]] – [[Septemb...
5: ...lowed in that tradition. ''Kelly Drive'' in Philadelphia is named for John, Jr., who was a city counci...
7: ...ecoming an actress, Kelly became a [[fashion]] model and appeared in her first [[film]], ''[[Fourteen ...
9: ...] for her role in ''[[From Here to Eternity]]''. Kelly made three films with [[Alfred Hitchcock]]: ''[... - Chromosome (12667 bytes)
2: ... described in detail by [[Walther Flemming]] in [[1882]]. In [[1910]], [[Thomas Hunt Morgan]] proved tha...
5: ...he chromosomes are special structures called ''[[telomere]]s''. DNA replication begins at many differe...
17: ...osome.png|frame|none|'''Figure 2:''' Different levels of DNA condensation. (1) Single DNA strand. (2) ...
19: ...ort arm of a chromosome can be extended by a [[satellite chromosome]] that contains codes for [[riboso...
37: <td>[[Drosophila melanogaster|Fruit fly]]</td> - Ponce De Leon (5480 bytes)
4: ...st settlement in [[Puerto Rico]], Caparra (later relocated to [[San Juan, Puerto Rico|San Juan]]). He ...
7: ...e León was then removed from office in 1512 and felt his good name had been damaged. Not wishing to s...
9: ...n the ''Historia general de los hechos de los Castellanos'' of [[Antonio de Herrera y Tordesillas]].
11: ...to Rico]]. The statue was made in [[New York]] in 1882 using the bronze from English Cannons seized afte...
14: ...]]) before returning to Puerto Rico.[[Image:poncedeleonburial.jpg|thumb|Cathedral where Ponce de Leon ...
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