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- Margaret of Anjou (3729 bytes)
12: ... of Westminster]], was born, on [[October 13]], [[1453]], he had suffered a complete mental breakdown. ... - Renaissance (14795 bytes)
1: ... [[Italy]] and the [[16th century]] in [[northern Europe]]. It is also known as "'''Rinascimento'''" (...
5: ...he rediscovery of ancient texts, and a rebirth of European culture in general.
23: ...represented the end of the old religious order in Europe.
51: ...ardt]]. This argues for a change from collective neutrality towards the ''lonely genius''. [[Goldthwai...
55: ...dle class]] over the older, more old-fashioned [[feudal class]]es, so that the middle class wanted pai... - Middle Ages (21063 bytes)
1: ...n [[Italy]], early [[16th century]] in [[Northern Europe]], as well as the [[Protestant Reformation]] ...
6: ...ically been termed the "[[Dark Ages]]" by Western European historians. That term has now fallen from f...
8: ...cture, and a unified cultural and educational milieu of far-ranging connections, had already been in d...
14: ...uption to the newly emerging societies of Western Europe. The Christian Church, the only centralised i...
16: ...nd potential threat to their rule) from powerful feudal nobles. Well known examples of such consolidat... - 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...
27: ...covery sheds new understanding. After 843 until [[1453]] there is a clear Byzantine art tradition. It wa...
29: ... was born in France in 1150 and spread throughout Europe, by the 13th century it had become the intern...
102: * [[European art history]] - Printing press (12986 bytes)
4: ...in [[868]] A.D. The technique was also known in [[Europe]], where it was mostly used to print [[Bible]...
6: ...ype was never extensively used in China until the European style printing press was introduced in rela...
8: ...berg introduced or invented the printing press in Europe is not accepted by all. The other candidate a...
11: ...ffusion (anthropology)|Diffusion]] of printing in Europe===
16: ...her level of industry (fueled by the high-quality European paper mills that had been opening over the ... - Greece (54754 bytes)
1: ...ts culture has proven especially influential in [[Europe]], [[Asia]] and [[Africa]].
37: | '''[[Currency]]''' || [[Euro]] (€)<sup>1</sup>
39: | '''[[Time zone]]'''<br/> - in [[European Summer Time|summer]]
40: ...Coordinated Universal Time|UTC]]+2)<br/>[[Eastern European Summer Time|EEST]] ([[Coordinated Universal...
50: ...nikí Dimokratía''}}) is a country in [[southern Europe]], situated on the southern end of the [[Balk... - List of people by name: Y (12717 bytes)
21: ...ita|Yamashita, Tomoyuki]] (1885-1946), Japanese lieutenant general in Malaya, Singapore and the Philip...
108: *[[Yoannis XI of Alexandria]], ([[1428]]-[[1453]]), Coptic Pope
133: ...[Ouchi Yoshitaka|Yoshitaka, Ouchi]], [[daimyo]], feudal leader in Japan
134: ...aga]], ([[1536]]-[[1565]]), [[Shogun]], Japanese feudal leader
199: *[[Eug讥 Ysa?sa?Eug讥]], ([[1858]]-[[1931]]), composer - List of painters (54090 bytes)
36: *[[Tadeusz Ajdukiewicz]] ([[1852]]-[[1916]])
171: *[[Rosa Bonheur]] ([[1822]]-[[1899]])
185: *[[Eugene Boudin|Eugène Boudin]]
216: *[[Tadeusz Brzozowski (painter)|Tadeusz Brzozowski]] ([[1818]]-[[1887]])
330: *[[Eugène Delacroix|Eugène Delacroix]] ([[1798]]-[[1863]]) - Byzantine Empire (29975 bytes)
43: | [[1453]]
51: ...th century when French authors such as [[Montesquieu]] began to popularize it. Hieronymus himself was ...
57: ... the East and ended its thousand year history, in 1453, as a [[Greek Orthodox]] state: An empire that be...
88: ...eligion from the former imperial lands in western Europe, although the southern Byzantine provinces di...
92: ...zu]]) that emphasized stealth, surprise, swift maneuver and the marshalling of overwhelming force at t... - Hundred Years' War (30012 bytes)
1: [[Image:Europe in 1430.PNG|thumb|350px|A map of Europe in the [[1430s]], at the height of the Hundre...
3: ...[[France]], beginning in [[1337]] and ending in [[1453]]. Historians lump these conflicts under the same...
5: ...hivalry]], the first standing armies in [[Western Europe]] since the time of the [[Western Roman Empir...
13: ...ed to [[Philip III of Navarre|Philip, count of Evreux]], who became [[List of Navarrese monarchs|king ...
21: ...p IV of France|Philip IV]] (Philip the Fair). By feudal law, this made Edward III the next heir to the... - Roman Empire (59037 bytes)
5: ...[Constantinople]]. After another millennium, in [[1453]], the Eastern Empire, better known as the [[Byza...
7: ... for such a long period of time [[31 BC]] – 1453, there are certain alternative names used by hist...
47: [[Image:Coliseum_rome.jpg|thumb|250px|Clipart provided by [http:/...
66: ...is mother and his tutors, particularly Lucius Annaeus [[Seneca the Younger|Seneca]]. However, as he gr...
78: ...t was he who first commissioned the [[Roman Colosseum]]; he also built a [[forum]] whose centerpiece w... - Russia (28007 bytes)
2: ...y that stretches over a vast expanse of eastern [[Europe]] and northern [[Asia]]. With an area of 17,0...
15: ...te prosperous, due to diversified trade with both Europe and Asia.
23: ...or less functional Christian state on the Eastern European frontier, allowing it to claim succession t...
29: ...qual footing with Britain, France, and Germany in Europe. Unrest of the downtrodden serfs and suppres...
53: ...istricts of Russia|federal districts]]'' (four in Europe, three in Asia) have been added as a new laye... - History of Christianity (35391 bytes)
32: *[[Dura-Europos]], [[Syria]] is the site of the earliest dis...
46: *[[Irenaeus of Lyons]], bishop of Lyons, categorized heresie...
94: ...n [[391]], and subsequent suppression, many Mithraeums were converted into Christian churches (such as...
109: *[[Irenaeus of Lyons|Irenaeus]] (bishop of Lyons and saint)
189: ...he spread of Christianity to Britain and Northern Europe - Ottoman Empire (15917 bytes)
45: ...rring to the Empire's position as gateway between Europe and Asia. In its day, the Ottoman Empire was ...
47: ...s with the [[Caliphate]], the Islamic State. In [[1453]], after the Ottomans [[Fall of Constantinople|ca...
53: ...ing). With the capture of [[Constantinople]] in [[1453]], the state became a mighty [[empire]] with [[Me...
55: ...ng this period, the Empire vied with the emerging European [[colonialism|colonial powers]] in the [[In...
57: ...n Empire was no longer the sole [[superpower]] in Europe. - Hagia Sophia (7132 bytes)
3: ... [[church]] converted to a [[mosque]], now a [[museum]], in [[Istanbul]], formerly [[Constantinople]]....
32: ...[[Ottoman Turks]] under Sultan [[Mehmed II]] in [[1453]]. Since more conservative factions of [[Islam]] ...
34: ...a was secularized and turned into the Ayasofya Museum. Nevertheless, the mosaics remained largely plas... - Konya (2390 bytes)
9: ...aramanid fell to the [[Ottoman Empire]] and, in [[1453]], Konya was made the provincial capital of the O... - Byzantine art (10470 bytes)
1: ...ntury]] until the fall of [[Constantinople]] in [[1453]]. (The Roman Empire during this period is conven...
3: ... under the rule of the [[Ottoman Empire]] after [[1453]]. In some respects the Byzantine artistic tradit...
7: ...Greece (see [[Greek art]]), and at least before [[1453]] never lost sight of its classical heritage, but...
15: ...[Romanos II]] (reigned 959-963) and the [[Empress Eudokia]] being crowned by Christ, a striking illust...
17: ...believe influenced the [[Renaissance]] in western Europe. - Byzantine coinage (4605 bytes)
12: ...lation until the end of the Byzantine Empire in [[1453]], though after the second half of the fourteenth...
14: ... on the obverse and the inscription "XRISTUS/bASILEU/bASILE", which translates to "Christ, King of Kin... - Constantinople (4125 bytes)
3: ...tantinople), where most gold coins circulating in Europe came from and were associated with.
9: ...y fell to the [[Ottoman Empire]] on [[May 29]], [[1453]], during the reign of Constantine Paleologos (&#... - Medieval History (23198 bytes)
2: ...n [[Italy]], early [[16th century]] in [[Northern Europe]], as well as the [[Protestant Reformation]] ...
8: ...ically been termed the "[[Dark Ages]]" by Western European historians. That term has now fallen from f...
10: ...cture, and a unified cultural and educational milieu of far-ranging connections, had already been in d...
16: ...uption to the newly emerging societies of Western Europe. The Christian Church, the only centralised i...
18: ...nd potential threat to their rule) from powerful feudal nobles. Well known examples of such consolidat...
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