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- Christopher Columbus (44177 bytes)
5: ...merica was known to the general public throughout Europe. This is likely due to the invention of the [...
9: ...t large-scale [[colonization]] of the Americas by Europeans.
11: ...genous people]]s, exploitation of the Americas by Europe, and slavery in the [[West Indies]]. Others h...
35: ...ancestry, in [[1479]]. Felipa's father, [[Bartolomeu Perestrelo]], had partaken in finding the [[Madei...
39: [[Christianity|Christian]] Europe, long allowed safe passage to [[India]] and [... - Steel (28384 bytes)
28: ...rgest piece of the meteorite to the [[American Museum of Natural History]] in [[New York City]] in [[1...
36: ...that warfare and mass migrations beginning around 1200 BC disrupted the regional tin trade, forcing a sw...
44: ...melting technology that would not be practiced in Europe until late medieval times. In Wu, iron smelt...
54: ...ic]] and '''''[[wootz steel|wootz]]''''' by later Europeans, was exported throughout much of Asia.
58: === Ironworking in medieval Europe === - List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
5: *[[Adachi Hatazo]], (1890-1947), Lieutenant general and Japanese commander in [[New Gui...
7: *[[Adachi Morinaga]], (1135-1200), Japanese warrior
83: *[[Fleur Adcock|Adcock, Fleur]], (born 1934), poet - Isabella of Jerusalem (7928 bytes)
7: ... staying: their tower was pointed out to him. Thereupon Saladin gave out orders throughout his army th...
23: ...) and [[Melisende of Lusignan|Melisende]] (born [[1200]]), and one son, Amalric ([[1201]]–1205). K... - Catherine II of Russia (9308 bytes)
5: ...-date on current events in Russia and the rest of Europe. She corresponded with many of the great mind...
9: ...harles de Secondat, Baron de Montesquieu|Montesquieu]], Catherine drew up a document to reform the cod...
16: ...ronation coach is exhibited in the [[Hermitage Museum]], [[Saint Petersburg|St. Petersburg]].]]
21: .... She attempted to partition the Ottoman Empire's European holdings after the Polish example, but achi...
23: ...n [[1780]] she set up a group designed to defend neutral shipping against [[Great Britain]] during the... - Chromosome (12667 bytes)
2: ...i-ordered structure inside the [[cell nucleus|nucleus]], where it wraps around [[histone]]s (structura...
4: == Chromosomes in eukaryotes ==
5: ...le linear chromosomes contained in the cell's nucleus. Each chromosome has one [[centromere]], with on...
12: *[[Euchromatin]], which consists of DNA that is active,...
19: ...unctions are often kept close together in the nucleus, even if they are far apart on the chromosome. T... - Medieval art (6359 bytes)
3: ...years of [[art history]] in [[Western art history|Europe]], the [[Islamic art history|Middle East]] an...
9: ...vigorous "Barbarian" artistic culture of Northern Europe to produce a remarkable artistic legacy. Inde...
29: ... was born in France in 1150 and spread throughout Europe, by the 13th century it had become the intern...
102: * [[European art history]] - Pottery (17136 bytes)
2: ...ttery that is fired at temperatures in the 800 to 1200 [[Celsius|?C]] range, which does not vitrify in t...
32: ...ural difficulties. It is best to select a light neutral clay body, and then add a colourant to separa...
66: ...on]] pottery (10,000-8,000 BC), Tokyo National Museum, [[Japan]].]]
69: In [[Europe]], burnt clay was already known in the late [... - History of sculpture (6101 bytes)
4: ...s figurines]] have been found mainly in central [[Europe]]. The [[Venus of Willendorf]] (30,000 - 25,...
6: ... East, (the area between the [[Tigris]] and the [[Euphrates]] Rivers), the [[Sumeria]]n, [[Akkadia]]n,...
13: ...and was donated to the [[New York Metropolitan Museum of Art]] by [[John D. Rockefeller, Jr.]] in [[19...
22: ...y sculptures can now be seen at the [[Egyptian Museum]] in [[Cairo]].
25: ...ean]] civilization covers the time period of 3000-1200 BC, during the [[Bronze Age]], in the area of the... - Silk (8683 bytes)
8: ...ensive that the major set of trade routes between Europe and Asia has become known as the [[Silk Road]...
11: ... and traded in silk, the secret was only to reach Europe around AD [[550]], via the [[Byzantine Empire...
17: ...ilks have been known and used in China, India and Europe from early times, although the scale of produ...
29: ==Europe==
30: ...t source of trade. Italian silk was so popular in Europe that [[Francis I of France]] invited Italian ... - Conventional Egyptian chronology (10774 bytes)
20: ...ed by [http://www.petrie.ucl.ac.uk/ The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology].)
241: *Amenmesse (Menmire) 1203-1200
242: *Seti II (Userkheperure-setepenre) 1200-1194 - Finland (29511 bytes)
1: ...rdic countries|Nordic country]] in northeastern [[Europe]], bordered by the [[Baltic Sea]] to the sout...
35: |'''[[Currency]]''' || [[Euro]] (€)<sup>1</sup>
37: | '''[[Time zone]]''' <br /> - in [[European Summer Time|summer]]
38: ...[Coordinated Universal Time|UTC]]+2)<br>[[Eastern European Summer Time|EEST]] ([[Coordinated Universal...
46: ...up> Prior to [[1999]]: [[Markka|Finnish markka]]. Euro a bank currency since 1999, in public circulati... - Israel (51605 bytes)
60: ...ism, Christianity, and [[Islam]]. Starting around 1200 BCE, a series of [[History of ancient Israel and ...
68: ...luding rule by the [[Seljuks]], [[Fatimids]], and European [[Crusades|Crusaders]], before becoming par...
73: ... murdered, led to immigration from other parts of Europe. After [[World War I]], the British endorsed ...
94: ...me to Israel, along with Jews from [[Iran]] and [[Europe]]. Israel's Jewish population continued to gr...
98: ...reluctantly chose to dismiss Israeli appeals for neutrality and undertook shelling of [[Tel Aviv]] in ... - Sudan (18856 bytes)
60: ...t in feudal Sudan. Important kingdoms in the next 1200 years include [[Makuria]] and the [[Kingdom of Se... - Bolivia (30115 bytes)
59: ...tural]] techniques before it disappeared around [[1200]] A.D., probably because of extended [[drought]]....
71: ... primitive conditions in the mines and in nearly feudal status on large estates, they were denied acce...
85: ... of public enterprises, such as the state [[Petroleum|oil]] corporation, [[telecommunications]] system...
105: ...uitable dividends paid by the multinational petroleum companies, set up roadblocks throughout the coun...
170: ...estizo]] (mixed indian and European) and 12% pure European. The largest of the approximately three-doz... - Iron Age (8996 bytes)
5: ...he [[Copper Age]] and later the [[Bronze Age]] in Europe and Asia whilst in the rest of the world it w...
10: ...y the metallurgy of the time. By [[1600 BC]] to [[1200 BC]], iron was used increasingly in the [[Middle ...
13: ...ory of iron and steelmaking]]), dating to circa [[1200 BC]].
17: ...ic]] and '''''[[wootz steel|wootz]]''''' by later Europeans, was exported throughout much of Asia.
21: ...ology propagated equally early into both Asia and Europe. The [[Sea Peoples]] and the related [[Philis... - Writing system (16928 bytes)
23: ...script]] may have evolved independently, around [[1200 BC]]. - Geologic time scale (26014 bytes)
17: ...e. Detailed studies of the strata and fossils of Europe produced, between 1820 and 1850, the sequence...
73: ...sidae|horned dinosaurs]]) evolve on land, as do [[Eusuchia|modern crocodilians]]; and [[mosasaur]]s an...
126: ...d vertebrates]]s, brackish water and amphibious [[eurypterid]]s; [[rhizodont]]s dominant fresh-water p...
137: ...n]]s (but still aquatic). "Old Red Continent" ([[Euramerica]])
148: ...racoderm|armoured]] [[agnatha|jawless forms]]. [[Eurypterid|sea-scorpions]] reach large size. [[Tabul... - Civilization (29205 bytes)
44: ...and malachite beads. Around [[1500 BC|1500]] to [[1200 BC]] Jericho and other cities of [[Canaan]] had b...
85: ...alized economy and culture is a product of recent European colonialism.
102: ...ner, civilizations began to spread outward from [[Eurasia]] across the world some [[agricultural revol...
115: ...tiated by a brilliant and much praised paragon of European civilization, and the attitude faded from p...
123: ... society''', which are much less ambiguous, more neutral-sounding terms. "Civilization," however, rema... - Francis Bacon (16741 bytes)
25: ...period Bacon became acquainted with [[Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex]] (1567-1601), [[Elizabeth I ...
29: ...of Essex,'' etc. He received a gift of a fine of ?1200 on one of Essex's accomplices.
45: ...fing it with snow, contracted a fatal case of [[pneumonia]]. He died at [[Highgate]]. He died on April...
47: ...d in 1597; ''In felicem memoriam Elizabethae'', a eulogy for the queen written in 1609; and various ph...
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