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- Mexico (27255 bytes)
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 people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
5: *[[Adachi Hatazo]], (1890-1947), Lieutenant general and Japanese commander in [[New Gui...
83: *[[Fleur Adcock|Adcock, Fleur]], (born 1934), poet
104: *[[David Adler|Adler, David]], (1882-1949), architect - 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).
81: ... Prime Minister and the Queen, as well as many in Europe. In [[1876]], encouraged by Disraeli, the Que... - Mary of Teck (14662 bytes)
1: ...ette of Bond Street, London. Copyright [[V&A]] Museum]]
11: ...rt gallery|art galleries]], [[church]]es and [[museum]]s.
17: ...mother. However, Prince Albert Victor died of [[pneumonia]] six weeks later.
29: ...ascelles, 6th Earl of Harewood ([[9 September]] [[1882]] – [[23 May]] [[1947]]); and had issue. - Rosa Luxemburg (23905 bytes)
8: ...m [[1886]]. The Proletariat had been founded in [[1882]], twenty years before the Russian workers' parti...
21: ...l problems in various newspaper articles all over Europe. Her attacks on German [[militarism]] and [[i...
25: ...gested a resolution, which was accepted, that all European workers' parties should unite in their atte...
29: ...she ensured that in case of war breaking out, the European workers' parties were committed to a genera...
53: ...nder the influence of a wave of mass strikes in [[Europe]], especially the [[Russian Revolution of 190... - Emmeline Pankhurst (1950 bytes)
5: ...Married Women's Property Act]]s of [[1870]] and [[1882]]. In [[1889]], Mrs Pankhurst founded the [[Wome... - Sylvia Pankhurst (3170 bytes)
3: '''(Estelle) Sylvia Pankhurst''' ([[May 5]], [[1882]] - [[September 27]], [[1960]]) was a campaigner ... - Mary Cassatt (9047 bytes)
4: ...10 years old, she visited many of the capitals of Europe, including [[London]], [[Paris]], and [[Berli...
8: ...aintings in Italy, after which she traveled about Europe.
10: ...[[1872]], after studying in the major European museums, her style matured, and in Paris, she studied w...
18: ...moving to Paris in [[1877]]. Her sister died in [[1882]], but her mother regained her health, and Cassat...
20: ...([[1880]]). [[Mary Cassatt]]. Oil on canvas. [[Museum of Fine Arts, Boston]].]] - Ouida (1938 bytes)
9: * ''Bimbi, Stories for Children'' (1882)
20: * ''In Maremma'' (1882) - Christine de Pizan (6645 bytes)
2: ...h Pisan in fact was merely describing a standard feudal practice whereby the wife of a nobleman was ex...
5: ...''[[Romance of the Rose]]'' written by [[Jean de Meung]].
11: ...ther--''lais'', ''virelais'', ''rondeaux'' and ''jeux a vendre''--though she took the precaution to as...
13: ...Christine wrote ''Le Lure des faitz ci bonnes manneurs du sayge roy Charles'' (1405), valuable as a fi...
17: ...th two great scholars of her time, [[Jean de Montreuil]] (d. 1415) and [[Gonthier Col]], who undertook... - Virginia Woolf (9482 bytes)
3: '''Virginia Woolf''' ([[January 25]], [[1882]] – [[March 28]], [[1941]]) was a [[United ... - Emmy Noether (2715 bytes)
1: '''Emmy Noether''' ([[March 23]] [[1882]] – [[April 14]] [[1935]]) was one of the m... - Florence Nightingale (15657 bytes)
35: ...z. It was restored and transferred to the Army Museum in [[Aldershot]].
63: By [[1882]] Nightingale nurses had a growing influential pr...
85: ...inistration. There is a [[Florence Nightingale Museum]] in London.
96: *[[Florence Nightingale Museum]] - Jennie Kidd Trout (1706 bytes)
7: Trout then opened the Therapeutic and Electrical Institute in Toronto, which spe...
9: Due to poor health, Trout retired in 1882 to [[Palma Sola, Florida|Palma Sola]], [[Florida]... - Clara Schumann (3372 bytes)
7: ...s that his compositions became generally known in Europe. [[Johannes Brahms]], at age twenty, met th...
9: ...ally, with the exception of four seasons, until [[1882]]; and from [[1885]] to [[1888]] she appeared eac... - Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (8386 bytes)
17: By [[1882]] the Theosophical Society became an internationa...
21: ...cremated]]; one third of her ashes were sent to [[Europe]], one third with [[William Quan Judge]] to t...
56: *''Theosophy: History of a pseudo-religion'', by Ren頇u鮯n [http://www.spiritus... - Sarah Bernhardt (3531 bytes)
6: ...in the [[1870s]], and was soon in demand all over Europe and in the [[United States]]. She soon develo...
10: ...es Damala (aka [[Jacques Damala]]) in London in [[1882]], but the marriage, which legally endured until ... - Grace Kelly (6610 bytes)
17: ...hat [[Monaco]] would revert to France since, in [[1882]], a childless prince of Monaco adopted an unrela... - Chromosome (12667 bytes)
2: ... described in detail by [[Walther Flemming]] in [[1882]]. In [[1910]], [[Thomas Hunt Morgan]] proved tha...
4: == Chromosomes in eukaryotes ==
5: ...le linear chromosomes contained in the cell's nucleus. Each chromosome has one [[centromere]], with on...
12: *[[Euchromatin]], which consists of DNA that is active,...
19: ...unctions are often kept close together in the nucleus, even if they are far apart on the chromosome. T... - Ponce De Leon (5480 bytes)
2: ... the Spanish Crown. He is regarded as the first [[Europe]]an known to have visited what is now the [[U...
4: ...ently died in great numbers after exposure to the European diseases the sailors brought with them and ...
11: ...to Rico]]. The statue was made in [[New York]] in 1882 using the bronze from English Cannons seized afte...
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