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- Elizabeth Woodville (6291 bytes)
36: * Bridget Plantagenet (1480-1517), nun at Dartford Priory, Kent - Middle Ages (21063 bytes)
1: ...ell as the [[Protestant Reformation]] starting in 1517. These various changes all mark the beginning of...
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... - Cairo (12536 bytes)
36: ...world north to the [[Turkic peoples|Turks]] and [[European]]s.
38: ...en by the [[Ottoman Empire]] under [[Selim]] in [[1517]], but the ruling [[Mameluks]] quickly returned t...
41: ...Bridge which traverses the Nile at Tahrir Square. European architecture and urban design, major infras...
47: ...trade, decided to rebuild Cairo on the model of a European capital. He hoped to have this done by [[18...
62: ... these treasures has meant that the [[Egyptian Museum]] in Cairo is the only place in the world that m... - Egypt (18830 bytes)
45: | '''[[Time zone]]'''<br/> - in [[European Summer Time|summer]]
46: ...Coordinated Universal Time|UTC]]+2)<br/>[[Eastern European Summer Time|EEST]] ([[Coordinated Universal...
71: ...e conquest of Egypt by the [[Ottoman Turks]] in [[1517]].
75: ...model Egypt's constitutional government after the European style of government; this was called [[Egyp...
142: ... in Saudi Arabia, the Gulf area like [[UAE]], and Europe. - History of Egypt (1881 bytes)
12: *[[History of early Arab Egypt]]: [[639]] to [[1517]]
13: *[[History of Ottoman Egypt]]: [[1517]] to [[1805]] - Israel (51605 bytes)
68: ...fore becoming part of the [[Ottoman Empire]] from 1517 until 1918. Throughout the centuries the size of ...
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... - List of painters (54090 bytes)
36: *[[Tadeusz Ajdukiewicz]] ([[1852]]-[[1916]])
103: *[[Fra Bartolommeo]] ([[1474]]-[[1517]])
171: *[[Rosa Bonheur]] ([[1822]]-[[1899]])
185: *[[Eugene Boudin|Eugène Boudin]]
216: *[[Tadeusz Brzozowski (painter)|Tadeusz Brzozowski]] ([[1818]]-[[1887]]) - Crusade (28507 bytes)
2: ...m|Muslims]], but some were directed against other Europeans, such as the [[Fourth Crusade]] against [[...
7: ...combined with the relative stabilization of local European borders after the Christianization of the [...
9: ...ghts]] and some [[mercenaries]] from elsewhere in Europe in the fight against the Islamic [[Moors]]. I...
13: ...ties in the Holy Land of Christendom, and western Europeans were not much concerned with the loss of f...
25: ...l as a powerful pincer movement on all of Western Europe, created a powerful motive to respond to [[By... - Thomas More (15893 bytes)
12: ... as an honest and effective public servant. In [[1517]] More entered the king's service as councilor an...
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... - Niccolo Machiavelli (11084 bytes)
3: ...e in [[realist]] [[political theory]], crucial to European statecraft during the [[Renaissance]].
10: ...aw influence for his work ''The Prince'' from the European leaders he met. His first mission was in [[...
49: ...prima deca di Tito Livio]],'' 3 vols., [[1512]]-[[1517]] (''Discourses on the First Ten Books of Titus L...
56: ...ersion of the [[The Golden Ass|classic work]]), [[1517]] (''[[The Golden Ass (Machiavelli)|The Golden As... - Spanish Inquisition (11421 bytes)
6: ...n from the [[Middle Ages]], as in the rest of the European countries, but not in the Kingdom of Castil...
16: ... St. Peter's in Rome as part of his political manoeuvering, aimed at consolidating the independent rea...
40: ...ustration]]. In spite of the actions of the other European [[Inquisition]]s, [[witchcraft]] was not a ...
63: *[[Cardinal Cisneros]], Grand Inquisitor 1507-1517 - 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...
18: ...e]], the main port of Spain, on [[October 20]], [[1517]], and from there went to [[Valladolid]] to see t...
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: - Hernan Cortes (17441 bytes)
12: ...Yucatán)|Francisco Hernández de Córdoba]] in [[1517]] and [[Juan de Grijalva]] in [[1518]] had return...
15: ... about the Aztec empire and the clash between the European and Indian cultures. However, as early as t...
33: ... the city was one of the largest in the world; in Europe, only Constantinople was larger. The most com...
35: ...s than six months by the new disease brought from Europe. Cannons did the rest. Despite the valiant re...
44: ...ept his explorations and eventually was the first European to set foot on the lower california. The Se... - 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: ...aliph of Islam]], and the Ottoman Empire was from 1517 until [[1922]] (or [[1924]]) synonymous with the ...
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.
59: ...tinued to be one of the major political powers of Europe. The banking system was reformed and the guil... - Martin Luther (43050 bytes)
37: ...s first public challenge of papal power came in [[1517]], over the selling of [[indulgence]]s. The ques...
41: In 1517, [[Albert of Mainz|Albert von Hohenzollern, Archb...
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... - History of Germany (53864 bytes)
15: ...Hermann) in the [[Battle of the Teutoburg Forest|Teutoburg Forest]]. Germany as far as the Rhine and t...
19: ...reat Migrations]], which changed the whole map of Europe. The Eastern Germanic peoples destroyed the W...
32: ...s of the Holy Roman Empire. From ''Bildatlas der Deutschen Geschichte'' by Dr Paul Kn? (1895)]]
33: ...ns). In 800 AD Charlemagne's authority in Western Europe was confirmed by his coronation as emperor in...
35: ...he term Kingdom (Empire) of the Germans ("Regnum Teutonicorum") was applied to the Frankish kingdom. - Manganese (14965 bytes)
45: ...g point]] </td><td>1517 [[Kelvin|K]] (2271 ?[[Fahrenheit|F]])</td></tr>
55: ... </td><td>121 [[Pascal|Pa]] at 1517 K</td></tr>
96: ...an="4">Mn is [[stable isotope|stable]] with 30 [[neutron]]s</td></tr>
111: [[Image:ManganiteUSGOV.jpg|thumb|left|Manganite, a manganese oxide]]
129: [[Image:ManganeseOreUSGOV.jpg|thumb|left|Manganese ore]] - First Crusade (34670 bytes)
2: ...peasants from many different nations of [[western Europe]], with little central leadership, travelled ...
5: ...enturies, combined with the relative stability of European borders after the [[Christianization]] of t...
7: ...sh knights and some mercenaries from elsewhere in Europe in the fight against the Islamic [[Moors]]. E...
9: ...ar against the Muslims was not implausible to the European nations. Muslims occupied the centre of the...
12: ... I Comnenus]], the empire was largely confined to Europe and the western coast of [[Anatolia]], and fa... - Medieval History (23198 bytes)
2: ...l as the [[Protestant Reformation]] starting in [[1517]]. These various changes all mark the beginning ...
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... - Germany in the Middle Ages (53864 bytes)
15: ...Hermann) in the [[Battle of the Teutoburg Forest|Teutoburg Forest]]. Germany as far as the Rhine and t...
19: ...reat Migrations]], which changed the whole map of Europe. The Eastern Germanic peoples destroyed the W...
32: ...s of the Holy Roman Empire. From ''Bildatlas der Deutschen Geschichte'' by Dr Paul Kn? (1895)]]
33: ...ns). In 800 AD Charlemagne's authority in Western Europe was confirmed by his coronation as emperor in...
35: ...he term Kingdom (Empire) of the Germans ("Regnum Teutonicorum") was applied to the Frankish kingdom.
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