Search results
|
No page with that title exists You can create an article with this title or put up a request for it. Please search Wikipedia before creating an article to avoid duplicating an existing one, which may have a different name or spelling.
Showing below 13 results starting with #1.
View (previous 20) (next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).
No article title matches
Page text matches
- List of people by name: Ab (7347 bytes)
56: ...abbar|Abdul-Jabbar, Kareem]], (born 1947), US athlete
76: *[[Robert Abercromby|Abercromby, Robert]], (1532-1613), Jesuit
91: *[[Abhijeet Kale]], [[cricketer]] from [[Maharashtra]], [[India]], in the cente...
103: ...ahams, Harold]], (1899-1978), track and field athlete
104: *[[Joze Abram|Abram, Joze]], (1875-1938), poet - Elizabeth I of England (34338 bytes)
2: ..._(Ermine_Portrait).jpg|thumb|right|220px|'''Elizabeth I''' <br><small>Queen of England and Ireland</sm...
7: ..., '''Gloriana''', or '''Good Queen Bess''', Elizabeth I was the fifth and final monarch of the [[Tudor...
9: ...I of England|Henry VIII]], she was a writer and poet. She granted [[Royal Charter]]s to several famous...
11: ...ouncil|Privy Counsellors]] from thirty-nine to nineteen, and later to fourteen.
13: ...r of the [[United States]], was named after Elizabeth I, the "Virgin Queen". - Peru (12264 bytes)
38: | '''[[Top-level domain|Internet TLD]]''' || [[.pe]]
48: ...rmy as an important political force. Once again, between [[1879]] and [[1883]], Peru and Bolivia made ...
55: ..., which is also known as ''Lima Metropolitana'' (Metropolitan Lima).
57: ...rring to today's regions, although it is now obsolete.
75: * [[Loreto Region|Loreto]] - Portugal (61755 bytes)
5: ... and cultural power. The [[Portuguese Empire]] stretched across the world. After the rise of other col...
15: .... The [[Celtic|Celtics]], a later wave of Celts, settled in [[Alentejo]].
23: ...he [[Visigoth]]s, invaded the Iberian peninsula, set up kingdoms, and became assimilated. The [[Vandal...
25:
27: ...ds of the cities of [[Coimbra]] and [[Porto]], together with the clergy of Braga, demanded the indepen... - List of painters (54090 bytes)
1: The following list is an incomplete '''list of painters'''.
12: *[[Claude Monet]], ([[1840]]-[[1926]]), French [[Impressionism|im...
16: *[[Rembrandt]], ([[1606]]-[[1669]]), [[Netherlands|Dutch]] [[painter]]
18: *[[Peter Paul Rubens]], ([[1577]]-[[1640]]), Belgian pai...
30: *[[Pieter Aertsen]] ([[1508]]-[[1575]]) - Ludovico Ariosto (4416 bytes)
1: ...]] – [[July 6]], [[1533]]) was an Italian poet, author of the [[epic]] poem ''[[Orlando furioso]...
3: ...ed at last to read classics under Gregorio da Spoleto. But after a short time, studying which he read ...
5: [[Image:Ariosto.jpg|thumb|Statue of the poet in [[Reggio Emilia]]]]
6: ...tance regularly paid during the period that the poet enjoyed it.
8: ...518]], and wished Aniosto to accompany him. The poet excused himself, pleading ill health, his love of... - Thomas More (15893 bytes)
2: ...ng that of [[Lord Chancellor]] from [[1529]] to [[1532]]. More coined the word "[[utopia]]", a name he ...
5: ...ere he studied [[Latin]] and [[logic]]. He then returned to London, where he studied law with his fat...
9: ...ost immediately, to a rich widow named Alice Middleton who was several years his senior. His new wife...
12: ...ing official documents, and serving as a liaison between the king and his Lord Chancellor: [[Thomas Ca...
19: ...) Erasmus also described More as a model man of letters in his communications with other European hum... - Inca Empire (25571 bytes)
9: ...ich referred to the four provinces whose corners met at the empire's capital, [[Cusco]] (Qosqo).
28: ...her as a family home or as a [[Camp David]]-like retreat.
30: ...e taught about Inca administration systems, then return to rule their native lands. This allowed the I...
32: ...s rival for the coast of Peru. T?Inca's empire stretched north into modern day Ecuador and Colombia.
42: ...finitively lost in [[1536]]. The Inca leadership retreated to the mountain regions of [[Vilcabamba]], ... - Andes (13210 bytes)
3: ...:Andes Chile Argentina.jpg|thumb|300px|The Andes between [[Chile]] and [[Argentina]]]]
5: ...d of an average height of about 4,000 m (13,000 feet).
8: ... peak, [[Aconcagua]], rising to 6,962 m (22,841 feet) [[above sea level]]. The summit of [[Chimborazo ...
12: ... beneath the South American plate. The boundary between the two plates is marked by the Peru-Chile [[...
13: ...ing]] of [[sedimentary rocks|sedimentary]] and [[metamorphic rocks]] of the ancient [[craton]]s to the... - Rubidium (10211 bytes)
18: | [[Alkali metal]]s
24: | 1532 [[kilogram per cubic metre|kg/m<sup>3</sup>]], 0.3
35: | 235 (265) [[picometre|pm]]
67: ...ntific notation|×]]10<sup>-6</sup> [[cubic metre per mole|m<sup>3</sup>/mol]]
79: | 1300 [[metre per second|m/s]] at 293.15 K - Francisco Vásquez de Coronado (19760 bytes)
3: ...mage:Coronado-Remington.jpg|thumb|right|Coronado Sets Out to the North, by [[Frederic Remington]], 186...
5: ... what are now the southwestern [[United States]] between 1540 and 1542. Coronado had hoped to conquer ...
8: ... of Juan Vásquez de Coronado y Sosa de Ulloa (d. 1532), 5. Señor de Coquilla and 5. Señor de la Torre...
11: ...ews|Jewish]] family. <ref> [http://pages.prodigy.net/bluemountain1/estrada1.htm estrada1<!-- Bot gener...
14: ...t]], towards [[New Mexico]]. When Marcos de Niza returned, he told about a city of vast wealth, a gold... - Hernán Cortés (42809 bytes)
4: ...anking nobleman, [[Antonio de Mendoza]]. Cortés returned to Spain in 1541 where he died peacefully bu...
10: ... latter two were most commonly used during his lifetime, but the former shortened form has become comm...
18: After two years, Cortés, tired of schooling, returned home to Medellín, much to the irritation of...
20: ...ir description of a sixteen-year-old boy who had returned home only to find himself frustrated by life...
26: ...ai, and Seville, listening to the tales of those returning from the Indies, who told of discovery and ... - Padua (12961 bytes)
2: ... picturesque, with a dense network of arcaded streets opening into large communal ''piazze'', and many...
7: ...e''. The new space was refrescoed by [[Nicolo' Miretto]] and [[Stefano da Ferrara]], working from [[14...
9: ...eat door, the work of [[Falconetto of Verona]], [[1532]].
11: ..." ([[Erasmo of Narni | Erasmo da Narni]]), the Venetian general ([[1438]]-[[1441]]), which was cast in...
15: ...rizio d'Acquapendente]], [[Galileo Galilei]], [[Pietro Pomponazzi]], [[Reginald Pole|Reginald, later C...
View (previous 20) (next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).