Search results
|
No page with that title exists You can create an article with this title or put up a request for it. Please search Wikipedia before creating an article to avoid duplicating an existing one, which may have a different name or spelling.
Showing below 10 results starting with #1.
View (previous 20) (next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).
No article title matches
Page text matches
- Paraguay (10959 bytes)
52: ...d the settlement of [[Asunci was founded in [[1537]]. The city eventually became the centre of a [[S...
132: * [http://www.meucat.com/album.html Paraguay de Antes] Old pictures... - Francesco Guicciardini (1068 bytes)
18: * ''Storia d'Italia'' (1537-1540) - Protestant Reformation (26890 bytes)
1: ...reform the [[Roman Catholic Church]] in [[Western Europe]]. The main front of the reformation was sta...
20: ...movement led to the Protestant Reformation in the European West. These frustrated reformist movements ...
22: ...ical reorganization of the economy and eventually European society. In the emerging urban centers, how...
24: ...were mixed blessings for many segments of Western European society. Despite tradition, landlords start...
30: ...duals through eloquence as opposed to reason. The European Renaissance laid the foundation for the Nor... - Gerardus Mercator (3294 bytes)
9: ...ok of italic script to be published in northern [[Europe]].
11: ...e16thcentury.jpg|thumb|left|300px|Mercator map of Europe]]
12: ...graphic workshop. He completed a six-panel map of Europe ([[1554]]) and he taught [[mathematics]]. He ...
17: The Mercatormuseum in [[Sint-Niklaas]], [[Belgium]] features exhibi... - Florence (11538 bytes)
3: A centre of medieval [[Europe]]an trade and finance, the city is sometimes ...
19: ...hs]], who after their victory split in turn into feuding "White" and "Black" factions led respectively...
21: ...become one of the most powerful and prosperous in Europe, assisted by her own strong gold currency, th...
28: ...e support of both Emperor and Pope, the Medici in 1537 became hereditary dukes of Florence, and in [[156...
60: In addition to the Uffizi, Florence has other museums which would be the premier art collection of al... - Hernando de Soto (explorer) (19418 bytes)
11: ...tinsuyu]] capital [[Cuzco]], and became the first European to talk to the Inca ruler [[Atahualpa]] whe...
13: ...He settled in [[Sevilla]], where he married, in [[1537]], [[In鳠de Bobadilla]], the daughter of Davila....
62: ...clear whether he, as it is claimed, was the first European to see the great river. However, he is the ...
79: ...sive and hostile relationship between natives and Europeans. More devastating than the gory battles, h...
81: ...en were, at the same time, the first and the last Europeans to experience the prime of the [[Mississip... - Cabeza de Vaca (4807 bytes)
7: ...o [[Mexico City]] and returned to [[Europe]] in [[1537]]. Cabeza de Vaca wrote about his experiences in...
9: ...lent towards the Native peoples. He was the first European to behold the [[Iguazu]] Falls, among the m... - Sebastiano Serlio (4494 bytes)
4: ...hFacade.jpg|thumb|right|Serlio's church facade of 1537 crystallized a format that lasted into the 18th c...
6: ...irst volume of his treatise appeared in Venice in 1537. A measure of the influence that Serlio exerted t...
10: ...Christopher Wren]] and Robert Woods, the entrepreneur who laid out [[Bath]]. - Germanium (8776 bytes)
102: | 1537.5 kJ/mol
134: ...="4" | Ge is [[stable isotope|stable]] with 38 [[neutron]]s
145: | colspan="4" | Ge is stable with 40 neutrons
149: | colspan="4" | Ge is stable with 41 neutrons
153: | colspan="4" | Ge is stable with 42 neutrons - Linnaean classification (11503 bytes)
1: ...ics. These groupings have been revised since Linnaeus to improve consistency with the [[Charles Darwin...
11: ...ists, such as [[Hieronymus Fabricius|Fabricius]] (1537–1619), [[Petrus Severinus]] (1580–165...
17: Two years after John Ray's death [[Carolus Linnaeus]] (1707–1778) was born. His great work, th...
19: Linnaeus adopted Ray's conception of species, but he made...
21: ... that no true names were fixed and accepted. Linnaeus' system made it easy to identify unambiguously a...
View (previous 20) (next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).