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- Mexico (27255 bytes)
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64: ...l plateau, the Mexica, or Aztecs, as they were sometimes called in memory of [[Aztlan], the starting p...
72: ...rom the United States, on the condition that the settlers convert to Catholicism and assume Mexican ci...
74: ...ly-arrived [[English language|English-speaking]] settlers, declared independence from Mexico at [[Wash... - List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
21: *[[Irmgard Adam-Schwaetzer|Adam-Schwaetzer, Irmgard]], (1942-), German government ministe...
42: ...les Francis]] (1866-1954), son of above, Navy secretary
60: *[[Leonie Adams|Adams, Leonie]], (born 1899), poet
65: ...22-1803), American patriot & Governor of Massachusetts
71: ...dams (footballer)|Adams, Tony]], (born 1966), athlete - Victoria of the United Kingdom (38571 bytes)
7: ...oria''' (Alexandrina Victoria [[Wettin (dynasty)|Wettin]], ''[[n饝]'' [[House of Hanover|Hanover]]) (...
18: Princess Victoria met her future husband, [[Prince Albert of Saxe-Cobur...
20: ... [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Queen Elizabeth II]]'s descendants a separate family surname, [[...
25: ...t Augustus of Hanover. As the young queen was as yet unmarried and childless, Ernest Augustus was also...
29: ...y resigned his commission, allowing Melbourne to return to office. - Mary of Teck (14662 bytes)
1: ...oria Mary of Teck, image by Lafayette of Bond Street, London. Copyright [[V&A]] Museum]]
5: ...mily]], as the model of regal formality and propriety, especially during State occasions. She was the ...
13: ...g [[World War I]], the Swiss Embassy helped pass letters from Mary to her aunt, who lived in [[Germany...
19: Despite this setback, Queen Victoria still favoured Princess May a...
28: ...2]]<td> married [[Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon|Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon]] ([[4 August]] [[1900]] – [[30... - Rosa Luxemburg (23905 bytes)
8: ...en up. Some of its members managed to meet in secret; Rosa joined one of these groups.
10: .... After fleeing to [[Switzerland]] from imminent detention in [[1889]], she attended [[Zurich Universi...
14: ...ndent Poland. Luxemburg denied the right of self-determination for nations under [[socialism]], which ...
16: ... life, Luxemburg was to remain the principal theoretician of the Polish Social Democrats, and led the ...
19: ...y changes in the whole environment of production methods occurred. She wanted the Revisionists to leav... - Emmeline Pankhurst (1950 bytes)
3: ...) was one of the founders of the British [[suffragette]] movement. It is the name of "Mrs Pankhurst",...
5: ...rtyr", [[Emily Davison]] and the composer, Dame [[Ethel Smyth]]. She was joined in the movement by he...
7: ...ns as many of the imprisoned working-class suffragettes; however, she did experience force-feeding aft... - Sylvia Pankhurst (3170 bytes)
3: ... 27]], [[1960]]) was a campaigner in the [[suffragette]] movement.
7: ...her mother Emmeline. But in contrast to them she retained her interest in the labour movement.
9: ...via set up the [[East London Federation of Suffragettes]] (ELFS), which over the years evolved politic...
13: ...the Workers Dreadnought to the party rather than retain it as a personal organ she revolted. As a resu...
15: ...tional in [[Russia]] and [[Amsterdam]] and also meetings of the Italian Socialist Party. She argued wi... - Mary Cassatt (9047 bytes)
8: ...or her basic needs but not her art supplies. She returned to Europe in [[1871]] when the archbishop of...
16: She met [[Edgar Degas]] in [[1874]], and he invited her t...
18: ...moving to Paris in [[1877]]. Her sister died in [[1882]], but her mother regained her health, and Cassat...
21: ... portrayed in intimate relationship and domestic settings.
29: ...he stopped painting because of near blindness. Nonetheless, she took up the cause of [[women's suffrag... - Ouida (1938 bytes)
8: ...) [http://www.gutenberg.net/etext/13912 Gutenberg etext of this book]
9: * ''Bimbi, Stories for Children'' (1882)
13: ...) [http://www.gutenberg.net/etext/1367 Gutenberg etext of this book]
20: * ''In Maremma'' (1882)
31: ...) [http://www.gutenberg.net/etext/3465 Gutenberg etext of this book] - Christine de Pizan (6645 bytes)
2: ...n their husband's absence and is therefore interpreted as a feminist push for expanded female roles; a...
9: ...etermined her to have recourse to [[literature | letters]] as a means of livelihood.
11: ...99]] she began to study the [[Latin]] poets, and between that time and 1405, as she herself declares, ...
15: ...ay of defence against those who objected to her pretensions as a moralist. [[Henry IV of England]] des...
19: ...ion of Paris by the English and Burgundians, she retired to a [[convent]]. - Virginia Woolf (9482 bytes)
3: ...f was a significant figure in London literary society and a member of the [[Bloomsbury group|Bloomsbur...
9: ...led as one of the greatest novelists of the twentieth century and one of the foremost [[Modernists]], ...
13: ...imultaneously as corrosion and rejuvenation- all set in a highly imaginative and symbolic narrative en...
15: ...ur life, that without me you could work" (<i>The Letters of Virginia Woolf</i>, vol. VI, p. 481).
20: ...anon and the future of women in education and society. - Emmy Noether (2715 bytes)
1: ...atician]]s of the early [[20th century]], with penetrating insights that she used to develop elegant a...
3: [[Image:Noether.jpg|thumb|Emmy Noether]]
5: ...]], [[Bavaria]], [[Germany]]. Her father, [[Max Noether]], was a distinguished mathematician and a pro...
8: ...ion, but the [[University of G?ngen]] refused to let her teach, and her colleague, [[David Hilbert]], ...
9: ...man. Allowing her on the faculty would also mean letting her vote in the academic senate. Said Hilbert... - Florence Nightingale (15657 bytes)
17: ...ejected the marriage proposal of politician and poet [[Richard Monckton Milnes, 1st Baron Houghton]], ...
19: ...bert]], a brilliant politician who had been [[Secretary at War]] ([[1845]] – [[1846|46]]), a pos...
25: ...c.edu/nsa/nightingale.html] in Upper [[Harley Street]], London, a position she held until October [[18...
33: ... She sent many letters to Herbert, to facilitate better medical care.
35: ...h waterproof hood and curtains. The carriage was returned to England after the war and subsequently gi... - Jennie Kidd Trout (1706 bytes)
1: ...edicine until [[1880]], when [[Emily Stowe]] completed the official qualifications.
3: ...") moved with her parents to Canada in [[1847]], settling near [[Stratford, Ontario|Stratford]], [[Ont...
9: ...rio|Kingston]]. Her family traveled extensively between Florida and Ontario, and later moved to [[Los... - Clara Schumann (3372 bytes)
7: ... composers including those of Bach, Mozart, and Beethoven as well as those of Robert Schumann and Brah...
9: ...ally, with the exception of four seasons, until [[1882]]; and from [[1885]] to [[1888]] she appeared eac...
11: As an artist she will be remembered, together with Joachim, as one of the first executants w... - Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (8386 bytes)
2: ... - [[May 8]], [[1891]] [[London]], [[England]]), better known as '''Helena Blavatsky''' or '''Madame B...
5: ...sian Empire]]), the daughter of [[Colonel|Col.]] Peter Alexeivich von Hahn and Elena Fadeev. Her mothe...
7: ... herself. It was in Cairo that she formed the Societe Spirite for [[occult]] phenomena with Emma Cutti...
11: ...piritualist]] phenomena. Soon they were living together in the "Lamasery" (alternate spelling: "Lamast...
13: ...e was not consummated either. She separated from Betanelly after a few months, and their divorce was l... - Sarah Bernhardt (3531 bytes)
4: ...was sponsored into the ''Conservatoire de Musique et D飬amation'' by the [[Duc de Morny]] in [[1859]]...
10: ...es Damala (aka [[Jacques Damala]]) in London in [[1882]], but the marriage, which legally endured until ...
11: [[Image:Sarah Bernhardt.png|thumb|right|Sketch of Sarah Bernhardt]]
12: ...resses, debuting as [[Hamlet]] in ''Le Duel d'Hamlet'' in [[1900]]. (Technically, this was not a silen...
16: ...n Maurice. She is buried in [[Le P貥 Lachaise Cemetery]], Paris, France. - Grace Kelly (6610 bytes)
5: ...ere new but prominent figures in Philadelphia society. Her father was a self-made millionaire and a go...
9: ...o [[Donna Reed]] for her role in ''[[From Here to Eternity]]''. Kelly made three films with [[Alfred H...
11: ...r with co-star [[Bing Crosby]], which was kept quiet to protect both their reputations.
15: ...Monaco|Prince Rainier III of Monaco]] marked her retirement from acting. Before her [[marriage]], she ...
17: ...gitimized his illegitimate daughter Charlotte Louvet, who would become Rainier's mother and made her h... - Chromosome (12667 bytes)
2: ... described in detail by [[Walther Flemming]] in [[1882]]. In [[1910]], [[Thomas Hunt Morgan]] proved tha...
8: ...DNA also exists as [[plasmid]]s. The distinction between plasmids and chromosomes is poorly defined, t...
13: ...ructural purposes during the chromosomal stages. Heterochromatin can be further distinguished into two...
14: ...ted around the centromere and usually contains repetitive sequences.
15: **''Facultative heterochromatin'', which is sometimes expressed. - Ponce De Leon (5480 bytes)
2: ...isited what is now the [[United States]] when he set foot in [[Florida]] in 1513.
4: ...to [[San Juan, Puerto Rico|San Juan]]). He was greeted with open arms by the [[Taino]] [[Cacique]], [[...
6: ...ge:Agueybana.JPG|right|thumb|Cacique Agueybana greeting Juan Ponce de León]]
7: ...f Christopher Columbus, who had been appointed lifetime military governor of his newly found discoveri...
11: ...to Rico]]. The statue was made in [[New York]] in 1882 using the bronze from English Cannons seized afte...
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