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- Esther (5002 bytes)
2: '''Esther''' ('''אֶסְתֵּר''', [[Standar...
9: ...common origin with [[Indo-European languages|Indo-European]] words for ''star''.
21: ...d hamantaschen originated amongst Jews of Eastern Europe in relatively recent times. - Joan of Arc (27453 bytes)
7: ...lle|Domré¹]] in the valley of the [[Meuse River|Meuse]] to [[Jacques D'Arc]] and Isabelle de Vouthon,...
10: ...in two joined vertical panels. [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]], [[New York City]].]]
11: ...irion).jpg|200px|right|thumb|''Jeanne d' Arc'' by Eugene Thirion ([[1876]]) depicts Joan's awe upon re...
12: ...ve, Durand Lassois, to bring her to nearby Vaucouleurs in order to ask the garrison commander, Lord Ro...
18: ...geau]] was taken on [[June 12]]; the bridge at [[Meung-sur-Loire]] was occupied on the 15th, followed ... - Israel (51605 bytes)
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 ...
104: ...s indefinite temporary membership of the "Western Europe and Others" group but agreed to not seek UNSC... - Dodo (9332 bytes)
12: ...aphus cucullatus | author=[[Carolus Linnaeus|Linnaeus]] | date = [[1758]]}}
15: ...lled ''Didus ineptus'' by [[Carolus Linnaeus|Linnaeus]]), more commonly just '''Dodo''', was a metre-h...
18: ...last stuffed Dodo, in [[Oxford]]'s [[Ashmolean Museum]], were burned in 1755.
24: ...y Andrew Kitchener, a biologist at the [[Royal Museum of Scotland]] (reported in ''National Geographic...
27: ...first visited by the [[Portugal|Portuguese]] in [[1505]], but the Dutch were the first permanent settler... - Josquin Des Prez (6810 bytes)
2: ...ance music|Renaissance]]. He was the most famous European composer between [[Guillaume Dufay]] and [[...
6: ...came one of the largest and most famous choirs in Europe; the ensemble included the composers [[Gaspar...
10: ...n at Ferrara was filled by [[Jacob Obrecht]] in [[1505]], who died of the plague that year, and by [[Ant...
20: ...came very popular, and were circulated throughout Europe; many of them are sung regularly by [[a cappe... - Leonardo da Vinci (25889 bytes)
9: ...n before modern naming conventions developed in [[Europe]], his full name was "Leonardo di ser Piero d...
49: ... [http://www.leonardoshorse.org/].) The [[Hunt Museum]] in [[Limerick, Ireland]] has a small bronze ho...
56: ...:Mona_Lisa.jpeg|thumb|''[[Mona Lisa]] (1503–1505/1506)'']]
59: ...Benois Madonna]]'' (1478-1480) - ''[[Hermitage Museum]]'', [[Saint Petersburg|St Petersburg]], Russia
62: ...with an Ermine]]'' (1488-90) - ''[[Czartoryski Museum]]'', [[Krakow]], Poland - Thomas More (15893 bytes)
7: ... [[celibacy]], More finally decided to marry in [[1505]], but for the rest of his life he continued to o...
19: ...l man of letters in his communications with other European humanists. The humanistic project embraced...
27: ...tious social life of [[Christianity|Christian]] [[Europe]]an states with the perfectly orderly and rea... - Charles Lindbergh (11557 bytes)
26: ... the loss of their son, the Lindberghs moved to [[Europe]] in December 1935. Hauptman, who maintained ...
29: In Europe during the rise of [[fascism]], Lindbergh tra...
31: ...commended that the [[United States]] negotiate a neutrality pact with [[Adolf Hitler]]. Lindbergh was ...
60: *Gerd Kröncke: [http://sueddeutsche.de/panorama/artikel/610/15595/ "Der Amerikan...
74: [[he:צ'ארלס לינדברג... - Ferdinand Magellan (19348 bytes)
2: ...died in the [[Philippines]] and never returned to Europe, 18 members of the crew and one ship of the f...
9: At age 20, Magellan first went to sea. In [[1505]] he was sent to [[India]] to install Francisco d...
57: ...imes to see whether we were all in the boats. Thereupon, beholding him dead, we, wounded, retreated, a...
64: ...(eye-glasses were only just becoming available in Europe).
100: ...n among Magellan's expedition were also the first Europeans to observe the following: - John Cabot (5966 bytes)
4: ...ica]]n mainland, he and his men being the first [[Europe]]ans since the [[Viking]]s verifiably known t...
10: ...rom the [[equator]], so the voyage from western [[Europe]] to eastern Asia would be shorter at higher ...
22: ...r know the truth. His men may have been the first Europeans on either American continent since the Vik...
31: ...nland]], Labrador and Newfoundland. In [[1501]]-[[1505]] an English syndicate, consisting of 3 [[Azores|... - Mahatma Gandhi (35350 bytes)
29: ...ing to travel on the footboard to make room for a European passenger. He suffered other hardships on ...
90: ...ignify their support for the future [[Canadian Museum for Human Rights]]. [http://www.mbchamber.mb.ca/...
95: ...emory of Mahatma Gandhi". The official Nobel e-museum has an article discussing the issue.[http://www....
138: ...an.org/ Mani Bhavan Gandhi Sangrahalaya Gandhi Museum & Library] Mani Bhavan is the place where Gandhi...
183: [[he:מוהנדס קרמצ'נד ... - Martin Luther (43050 bytes)
21: ...r's degree in [[1502]] and a Master's degree in [[1505]]. According to his father's wishes, Martin enrol...
23: ...at changed during a thunderstorm in the summer of 1505. A [[lightning bolt]] struck near to him as he wa...
43: ...oughout Germany, and within two months throughout Europe.
61: ...h Christ and the Saints. The basal concept of the Eucharist, moreover, according to him, is the forgiv...
66: ...s; abrogation of the celibacy of the clergy; and reunion with the Bohemians; besides demanding a gener... - Charles Darwin (47469 bytes)
19: ...dinburgh University]], then one of the largest in Europe. At professor Robert Jameson's ''Wernerian Na...
68: ...in Gower Street, London, and Darwin moved his "museum" in over Christmas. He was showing the stress, a...
125: ...was trying to overthrow. Owen initially appeared neutral, but his review condemned the book, leading D...
161: ===Eugenics and Social Darwinism ===
162: ...h, Galton began calling his social philosophy ''[[Eugenics]]'', and in the [[20th century]] they becam... - Dodos (9122 bytes)
12: ...aphus cucullatus | author=[[Carolus Linnaeus|Linnaeus]] | date = [[1758]]}}
15: ...lled ''Didus ineptus'' by [[Carolus Linnaeus|Linnaeus]]), more commonly just '''Dodo''', was a metre-h...
18: ...last stuffed Dodo, in [[Oxford]]'s [[Ashmolean Museum]], were burned in 1755.
24: ...y Andrew Kitchener, a biologist at the [[Royal Museum of Scotland]] (reported in ''National Geographic...
27: ...first visited by the [[Portugal|Portuguese]] in [[1505]], but the Dutch were the first permanent settler... - Elamite Empire (23098 bytes)
13: ...language|Sumerian]], and [[Iranian languages|Indo-European]] languages. Some scholars believe the lang...
17: ... 3100?2900 BCE, Iran, kept at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.]]
21: ...amite civilization grew up east of the Tigris and Euphrates, in the watershed of the river [[Karun]]. ...
72: ...an]] in the mid [[7th century BC]], forming a nucleus that would expand into the [[Persian Empire]].
141: ...uk-Nahhunte (c. [[1520s BC|1520]] - c. [[1500s BC|1505 BCE]]) - Flight (3194 bytes)
57: [[he:טיסה]]
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