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- List of explorers (24013 bytes)
10: *[[Antonio de Abreu]] ([[16th century]] [[Portuguese]] explorer of [[...
23: ...acific Ocean]], founded Darién, oldest surviving European settlement in the South American continent.
77: ...n Dezhnev]], [[Russians|Russian]] explorer, first European who sailed through [[Bering Strait]]
78: *[[Bartolomeu Dias]], (1450-1500), [[Portuguese]] explorer who ...
80: ..., [[15th century]] [[Portuguese]] explorer, first European to reach [[Cape Verde]] - List of people by name: Ai (1915 bytes)
5: ...Gregor Aichinger|Aichinger, Gregor]], (circa 1565-1628), German composer - Artemisia Gentileschi (23093 bytes)
16: ...'') ([[1612]]-13), stored in the [[Capodimonte Museum of Naples]], is impressive for the violence port...
38: ...tistic period of Rome, full of artists from all [[Europe]].
42: ...ster and Assuero"'') located at [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]] in [[New York City|New York]] (testimon...
46: ...d by the ''Annunciation'' in the [[Capodimonte Museum]]. Later she permanently relocated to [[Naples]]...
48: ...ovanni Battista"'') located in the [[Del Prado Museum in Madrid]], and ''Corisca e il satiro'' (''"Cor... - Circulatory system (8794 bytes)
48: ...cted by the intestines from food. The liver also neutralizes some [[toxin]]s taken up by the intestine...
65: ...hile arterial blood gave vitality by containing pneuma (air) and originated in the heart. Blood flowed...
71: ...rmed a sequence of experiments and announced in [[1628]] the discovery of the human circulatory system a... - Printing (4400 bytes)
13: ...tenberg]], of the German city of Mainz, developed European printing technology in 1440. Basing the des...
15: ...ng press in North America at Massachusetts Bay in 1628, and helped establish the Cambridge Press.
62: * [[National Print Museum of Ireland]] - Age of Exploration (14467 bytes)
1: ...geoning [[capitalism]] in Europe. In the process, Europeans encountered peoples and mapped lands previ...
3: ...a]]. These that were a combination of traditional European and Arab designs were the first ships that ...
6: ... the most accurate world maps prior to the age of European exploration]]
7: ...ese were almost all Italians as the trade between Europe and the Middle East was almost completely con...
9: ... ''[[Travels]]'' and the work was read throughout Europe. - Barbados (21887 bytes)
13: ...of the first British settlers in [[1627]]–[[1628]] until independence in [[1966]], Barbados was un...
54: ...n Direct Investment to the World]. Businessman [[Eugene Melnyk]] of [[Toronto]] in [[Ontario]], [[Can...
71: * [[Barbados Historical Museum]]
124: ...nder of the population includes small groups of [[Europe]]ans and [[Asia]]ns, including the ''[[Redleg... - 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]]) - Timeline of microscope technology (1673 bytes)
5: ...by later writers ([[Pierre Borel]] 1620 - 1671 or 1628 - 1689 and [[Willem Boreel]] 1591 - 1668) to have...
13: * [[1674]] - [[Anton van Leeuwenhoek]] improves on a simple microscope for view... - Thomas Hobbes (26163 bytes)
14: ...and Latin authors, the outcome of which was, in [[1628]], his great translation of [[Thucydides]]'s [[Hi...
16: ...re, died of the [[Bubonic plague|plague]] in June 1628. The widowed countess dismissed Hobbes but he soo...
30: ...4 there was an exodus of the king's supporters to Europe. Many came to Paris and were known to Hobbes....
89: * (1628) translation of [[Thucydides]]'s ''[[History of t... - Rene Descartes (17976 bytes)
18: ...Richelieu]] in [[1627]]. He left for Holland in [[1628]], where he lived and changed his address frequen...
26: ...f Sweden]]. The cause of death was said to be [[pneumonia]] - accustomed to working in bed till noon, ...
56: * 1626–1628. ''Regulae ad directionem ingenii'' (''[[Rules fo...
86: * 1983. ''Oeuvres de Descartes'' in 11 vols. Adam, Charles, and...
93: * 1628. ''[[Rules for the Direction of the Mind]]''. - List of philosophers (79981 bytes)
232: *[[Pierre Bourdieu]], (1930-2002){{fn|R}}
414: *[[Tadeusz Czezowski]], (1889-1981)
438: *[[Gilles Deleuze]], (1925-1995){{fn|O}}{{fn|R}}
445: *[[Denys the Carthusian]] (or ''Denys de Leeuwis''), (1402-1471){{fn|R}}
451: *[[Paul Deussen]], (1845-1919) - Samuel de Champlain (12497 bytes)
9: ...in the spring of [[1604]] led by [[Pierre Dugua Sieur de Monts]]. He helped found the [[Saint Croix Is...
19: ...ave;re des Iroquois (now [[Richelieu River|Richelieu]]) when he subsequently discovered [[Lake Champla...
27: ..., a feat that had only been done once before by a European.
29: ...ral's name, to appoint “such captains and lieutenants as shall be expedient,” to “co...
53: ... for a passage to China. At the time, most of the European powers believed that North America included... - Linnaean classification (11503 bytes)
1: ...ics. These groupings have been revised since Linnaeus to improve consistency with the [[Charles Darwin...
11: ...he research of people like [[Marcello Malpighi]] (1628–1694), [[Jan Swammerdam]] (1637–1680)...
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... - Medieval medicine (14745 bytes)
19: ... as the [[Ars medica]], which became the basis of European medical education for several centuries, ev...
21: ...ext hundred years, later spreading to the rest of Europe.
23: ...ibn Munqidh]] for example visited sick or injured European pilgrims who eventually died due to their o...
25: ...ll to no avail since about half the population of Europe was wiped out.
78: ...s. Almost a half of the [[hospital]]s in medieval Europe were directly affiliated with monasteries, pr...
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