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 up to 20 results starting with #1.
View (previous 20) (next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).
No article title matches
Page text matches
- Mexico (27255 bytes)
76: ...ror of Mexico]] from [[1864]] to [[1867]]. In mid-1867, following repeated losses in battle to the Repub...
78: ...investment allowed the development of the [[Petroleum|oil]] industry and the construction of the [[rai...
178: ...Trade Agreements]], including [[Japan]] and the [[European Union]]. However more than 85% of the trade...
185: ...predominantly Amerindian, and 9% is white or of [[Europe]]an descent. The remaining 1% includes black,...
201: ...Venetian language|Venetian]] dialect. While other European immigrants assimilated into the Mexican cul... - List of U.S. state capitals (5230 bytes)
57: | [[1867]] — [[1876]] (design), [[1884]] — [[1...
133: | [[1867]] — [[1875]] - 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.
40: *[[William S. Bruce]], (1867-1921) Scottish explorer of Antarctica
77: ...n Dezhnev]], [[Russians|Russian]] explorer, first European who sailed through [[Bering Strait]]
78: *[[Bartolomeu Dias]], (1450-1500), [[Portuguese]] explorer who ... - Steel (28384 bytes)
28: ...rgest piece of the meteorite to the [[American Museum of Natural History]] in [[New York City]] in [[1...
36: ...as fully into the iron age by [[900 BC]], central Europe by [[800 BC]]. The reason for this sudden ad...
44: ...melting technology that would not be practiced in Europe until late medieval times. In Wu, iron smelt...
54: ...ic]] and '''''[[wootz steel|wootz]]''''' by later Europeans, was exported throughout much of Asia.
58: === Ironworking in medieval Europe === - Victoria of the United Kingdom (38571 bytes)
14: ...e family. Princess Victoria's father died of [[pneumonia]] eight months after she was born. Her grand...
53: ... Earl of Clarendon|Lord Clarendon]], the [[Lord Lieutenant of Ireland]], the head of the British admin...
55: ...ressure from a number of prime ministers, lords lieutenant and even members of the Royal Family, to es...
60: ...useum]] (later renamed the Victoria and Albert Museum).
73: ...f the nineteenth century — the [[Reform Act 1867]] — was passed by Parliament. Lord Palmerst... - Mary of Teck (14662 bytes)
1: ...ette of Bond Street, London. Copyright [[V&A]] Museum]]
3: ...lga Pauline Claudine Agnes) ([[May 26|26 May]], [[1867]] – [[March 24|24 March]], [[1953]]) was th...
9: ...s Victoria Mary of Teck was born on [[May 26]], [[1867]], at [[Kensington Palace]], [[London]]. Her fat...
11: ...rt gallery|art galleries]], [[church]]es and [[museum]]s.
17: ...mother. However, Prince Albert Victor died of [[pneumonia]] six weeks later. - The Valiant Five (3833 bytes)
11: ...ection 24 of the [[British North America Act]], [[1867]], included the possibility of women becoming [[S...
17: *the framers of the Act, in 1867, could not have had it in mind to permit women se... - Millicent Fawcett (1226 bytes)
5: ...arrett''' in [[Aldeburgh]], [[Suffolk]], and in [[1867]] she married the economist [[Henry Fawcett]], wh... - Sojourner Truth (2794 bytes)
15: She returned to Michigan in [[1867]] and died at her home in [[Battle Creek, Michiga... - Ouida (1938 bytes)
31: * ''Under Two Flags'' (1867) [http://www.gutenberg.net/etext/3465 Gutenberg ... - Marie Curie (5862 bytes)
2: ...'Maria Skłodowska-Curie''', [[November 7]] [[1867]] – [[July 4]] [[1934]]) was a [[Polish]] c...
25: ...h near [[Sallanches, France]] in 1934 was from [[leukemia]], almost certainly due to her massive expos... - Spleen (4479 bytes)
5: ...uding [[malaria]], [[bacterial endocarditis]], [[leukaemia]], [[pernicious anaemia]], [[Hodgkin's dise...
14: ...he poet [[Charles-Pierre Baudelaire]] ([[1821]]-[[1867]]) but was already used before, in particular in ... - Cairo (12536 bytes)
36: ...world north to the [[Turkic peoples|Turks]] and [[European]]s.
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...
75: ...traveled in Egypt is over 40 times as high as the European average and twice as high as the nearest co... - Andrew Johnson (12662 bytes)
76: ...'[[Edwin M. Stanton]]'''||align="left"|1865–1867
107: ... [[Tenure-of-Office Act]], made law in March of [[1867]], which was a law that Congress had specifically...
118: * [[Nebraska]] – [[March 1]], [[1867]] - William A. Wheeler (2833 bytes)
46: ...gate to the state constitutional conventions in [[1867]] and [[1868]], and was elected to the Forty-firs... - Canada (35540 bytes)
8: ...h North America Acts|British North America Act of 1867]] and styled the "[[Canada's name|Dominion of Can...
88: ... who became known as [[Acadian]]s, were the first Europeans to settle permanently in Canada, followed ...
90: ...French and Indian Wars]]), exacerbated by wars in Europe between France and [[Great Britain]]. France...
94: ...nly after the French and Napoleonic wars ended in Europe that large-scale immigration to Canada resume...
98: ...erm "[[Canadian Confederation]]" refers to this [[1867]] unification of the provinces of Nova Scotia, Ne... - South Africa (40100 bytes)
3: ...]], as well as the largest [[Coloured]] (of mixed European and African descent) community in Africa, m...
15: Many white South Africans also speak other [[Europe]]an languages, such as [[Portuguese language|...
32: The discovery of [[diamond]]s in [[1867]] and [[gold]] in [[1886]] encouraged economic gr...
105: ... original [[temperate forest]] that met the first European settlers to South Africa was extinguished r...
107: ...f water-storing [[succulent]]s like [[aloe]]s and euphorbias in the very hot and dry [[Namaqualand]] a... - Slovakia (19892 bytes)
40: | '''[[Time zone]]'''<br> - in [[European Summer Time|summer]]
41: ...[Coordinated Universal Time|UTC]]+1)<br>[[Central European Summer Time|CEST]] ([[Coordinated Universal...
52: ...ary]] in the south. Slovakia is a member of the [[European Union]] and has a population of more than f...
73: ...[[Austria-Hungary|Austro-Hungarian Empire]], from 1867 to 1918, the Slovaks experienced severe oppressio...
77: ...lvet Divorce]]. Slovakia became a member of the [[European Union]] in [[May 2004]]. - Romania (19812 bytes)
1: ...manian]]: Rom⮩a) is a country in southeastern [[Europe]]. It is bordered by [[Ukraine]] and [[Moldov...
40: currency = [[Romanian leu|Leu]] |
42: time_zone= [[Eastern European Time|EET]] |
44: time_zone_DST= [[Eastern European Summer Time|EEST]] |
66: ...he 18th century, the [[Austrian Empire]] (since [[1867]] [[Austria-Hungary]]) incorporated Transylvania ... - Hungary (18459 bytes)
1: ...ngary''' is a [[landlocked]] country in [[Central Europe]], bordered by [[Austria]], [[Slovakia]], [[U...
42: time_zone= [[Central European Time|CET]] |
44: time_zone_DST= [[Central European Summer Time|CEST]] |
61: ... today) became an artistic and cultural center of Europe during the [[Renaissance]]. Hungarian culture...
67: ...ratz]], [[1866]]), Hungary would eventually, in [[1867]], manage to become an autonomous part of the [[A...
View (previous 20) (next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).