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  1. Steel (28384 bytes)
    26: ...n recovered from meteorite falls allowed ancient peoples to manufacture small numbers of iron artifact...
    28: ...obert Peary]] shipped the largest piece of the meteorite to the [[American Museum of Natural History]]...
    32: ...g|smelted]] iron objects (distinguishable from meteoric iron by their lack of [[nickel]]) appear in [...
    36: ... of debate among archaeologists. One prominent theory is that warfare and mass migrations beginning a...
    44: Archaeologists and historians debate whether bloomery-bas...
  2. Melisende of Jerusalem (16880 bytes)
    9: ...reginam regni potestas penes dominam Melisendem, Deo amabilem reginam, cui jure hereditario competebat...
    13: ...'s son of previous marriage, [[Geoffrey of Anjou|Geoffrey]] was in these same years married to Empress...
    25: ...reginam regni potestas penes dominam Melisendem, Deo amabilem reginam, cui jure hereditario competebat...
    45: ... Tension between mother and son mounted between [[1150]] and [[1152]], with Baldwin blaming Manasses for...
    65: ...'Uppity Women of the Medieval Times''", by Vicki Leon. Conari Press, 1997
  3. Agnes of Courtenay (6051 bytes)
    3: ...t of [[Edessa, Mesopotamia|Edessa]] was lost in [[1150]]. Her first husband was Reynald of Marash, who l...
    5: ...councillors believed he could make a more advantageous diplomatic marriage. Despite the annulment, th...
    20: ...or]], and [[Yolanda of Flanders]]. She married [[Geoffrey II Villhardouin]], [[Principality of Achaea|...
  4. Hildegard of Bingen (14070 bytes)
    3: ...dash; [[September 17]], [[1179]]) was a [[German people|German]] [[abbess]], [[Monasticism|monastic]] ...
    17: ...the time of schisms and religious foment, when someone preaching any outlandish doctrine could instant...
    22: ...sic, Hildegard also wrote medical, botanical and geological treatises, and she even invented an [[cons...
    24: ...rd also authored ''Physica and Causae et Curae'' (1150), both works on natural history and curative powe...
    47: ...As a result of the long-standing devotion of the people to Hildegard, her name was taken up in the Rom...
  5. Medieval art (6359 bytes)
    17: ...rt of native [[Celtic language|Celtic speaking]] peoples of Ireland and Britain from about the 5th cen...
    19: ... describes the art of Germanic, Slavic and other peoples during the [[V?rwanderung|Migration period]] ...
    29: ...tyle. [[Gothic sculpture]] was born in France in 1150 and spread throughout Europe, by the 13th century...
    80: ...[Medieval antiquarian]] ([[Antiquarian]] / [[Archaeology]]) (collected Classical art)
    106: * [[Paleography]]
  6. Blast furnace (4721 bytes)
    4: ...t in [[Sweden]] at Lapphyttan, sometime between [[1150]] and [[1350]]. It is unclear whether the blast ...
  7. Medieval music (31843 bytes)
    16: === Theory and notation ===
    17: ... another ligature indicated a change. A German theorist of a slightly later period, Franco of Cologne...
    19: ...be written in different tempus signatures simultaneously. Many scholars, citing a lack of positive a...
    21: ..., [[Jacques of Liège]], [[Johannes de Grocheo]], [[Petrus de Cruce]] (Pierre de la Croix), and ...
    23: == Early Medieval music ( -1150)==
  8. Castle (27805 bytes)
    28: ...river estuary, and often made use of the natural geography to support the defensive walls through expl...
    59: ...on penetrated to Europe, and Alnwick Castle (1140-1150) shows the influence of the new system.
    73: ...e of such fortresses in private hands, while the people hated them from the first for the oppressions ...
    94: ...nd then the rest; to protect the workers and the people already inhabitating the castle.
    99: ...ish Castles of the 10th and 11th Centuries" (Archaeol. Journal, lx., 1902); Mrs Armitage's "Early Norm...
  9. Phoenix, Arizona (34271 bytes)
    5: ... [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania]] with 1.5 million people
    46: ...a]] (Akimel O'otham) phrase, ''Ho Ho Kam'', "the people who have gone". They also lived in the [[Pueb...
    49: ... west of Mesa, which was already a city of 1,000 people; and a few miles northwest of a similar farmin...
    74: In [[1902]], President [[Theodore Roosevelt]] signed the [[Newlands Reclamation...
    76: On [[May 18]], [[1911]], the [[Theodore Roosevelt Dam]], then the largest masonry dam...
  10. Des Moines, Iowa (13222 bytes)
    14: ...ong (5.6 km) [[skyway|skywalk]] system, allowing people to travel between buildings without going out ...
    45: == Geography ==
    73: ...[census]]{{GR|2}} of [[2000]], there are 198,682 people, 80,504 households, and 48,704 families residi...
    75: ...olds are made up of individuals and 10.2% have someone living alone who is 65 years of age or older. ...
    87: ...ines. Trains on the route that passes through Osceola, the [[California Zephyr]], go east to [[Chicag...
  11. List of philosophers (79981 bytes)
    15: *[[Judah Leon Abravanel|Judah ben Isaac Abravanel]], (1460?-15...
    25: *[[Theodor Adorno]], (1903-1969){{fn|C}}{{fn|O}}{{fn|R}}
    39: *[[Leone Battista Alberti]], (1404-1472)
    46: *[[Alcmaeon of Croton]], (5th century BC){{fn|O}}{{fn|R}}
    109: *[[Georg Anton Friedrich Ast]], (1778-1841)
  12. Olmec (8916 bytes)
    1: The '''Olmec''' were an ancient people living in the [[tropic]]al lowlands of south-c...
    11: ...ore than a thousand years before the time of the people the Aztecs knew as the "Olmec". It is not know...
    14: ...distinctively Olmec features begin to emerge at c.1150 BCE. The rise of [[civilization]] here was probab...
    21: ...ology.org/online/features/olmec/index.html ''Archaeological Institute of America,'' March 28, 2005]).
    28: ...s suggestion. They have pointed out that not all people with wide noses and thick lips are African; so...
  13. Sumer (14409 bytes)
    5: ...nal geographic origins of the Sumerians. Some archeologists have advanced the notion that the Sumerian...
    14: ...ist whose existence is authenticated through archaeological evidence, is that of [[Enmebaragesi]] of K...
    21: ...ere in turn defeated by the [[Elamites]] around [[1150 BC]].
    26: ...y the use of [[shaduf]]s, [[canal]]s, [[channel (geography) | channels]], [[dyke (construction)|dykes]...
    71: ...each city having its own twist on mythology and theology.
  14. Ashkelon (5935 bytes)
    6: [[Archeology|Archeological]] excavations began in [[1985]] led by [[L...
    8: ... large as an ancient city with as many as 15,000 people living inside walls a mile and a half (2.4 km)...
    14: ...[[600s BC|604 BCE]], burnt and destroyed and its people taken into exile, the Philistine era was over.
    18: ... in [[1099]], the city itself was not taken. In [[1150]] it was fortified with fifty-three towers by its...
    25: ...onalgeographic.com/ngm/0101/feature4/ ''National Geographic'' January 2001, "Ashkelon, ancient city of...
  15. Erbium (9509 bytes)
    82: ...2" align="center" bgcolor="#ffbfff" | '''Miscellaneous'''
    100: | 1150 kJ/mol
    195: ...sub> was independently isolated in [[1905]] by [[Georges Urbain]] and [[Charles James]]. Reasonably pu...
  16. Iron (23778 bytes)
    65: ...="2" align="center" bgcolor="#ffc0c0">'''Miscellaneous'''</th></tr>
    139: ...us of iron has the highest binding energy per nucleon, so it is the heaviest element that is produced ...
    154: ...om iron recovered from [[meteorite]]s. Because meteorites fall from the sky some linguists have conjec...
    156: ... of smelted iron objects (distinguishable from meteoric iron by the lack of nickel in the product) app...
    161: ...nt and was not easily hardened by quenching. The people of the Middle East found that a much harder pr...
  17. Silicon (13233 bytes)
    6: {{Elementbox_econfig | &#91;[[neon|Ne]]&#93; 3s<sup>2</sup> 3p<sup>2</sup> }}
    27: {{Elementbox_section_miscellaneous | color1=#cccc99 | color2=black }}
    51: *[[Pottery]]/[[Vitreous enamel|Enamel]] - It is a refractory material u...
    68: ...ponent of [[aerolite]]s which are a class of [[meteoroid]]s and also of [[tektite]]s which is a natura...
    95: ...ty silicon rods are exposed to trichlorosilane at 1150 &deg;C. The trichlorosilane gas decomposes and d...
  18. History of science in the Middle Ages (30877 bytes)
    6: ...day [[obsolete]], and partly because of the [[stereotype]] of Middle Ages as supposedly "[[Dark Ages|D...
    14: ...tapestry of rural populations and semi-[[nomad]] peoples. The political instability and the downfall o...
    16: ...ance about the period combined with popular [[stereotype]]s.
    18: ...um'', or scientific education ([[arithmetic]], [[geometry]], [[astronomy]] and [[music]]). From the ye...
    20: ...astic]] tradition of [[Christian philosophy]]. Moreover, in the [[12th century|12th]] and [[13th centu...
  19. Elamite Empire (23098 bytes)
    10: ...ed by its low-lying later capital, [[Susa]], and geographers after [[Ptolemy]] called it ''Susiana''. ...
    13: ...uages]]). They have also been connected by some theorists with the [[Harappan]] civilisation found in ...
    27: *Neo-Elamite period: ca. 1100 BC &ndash; 539 BC (chara...
    34: ... Sumerian king who is the earliest (to date) archaeologically proven to exist through inscriptions, [[...
    53: ...ed Babylon, and carried off to Susa the stela whereon was inscribed the famous law code of Hammurabi. ...

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