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
- List of U.S. state capitals (5230 bytes)
53: | [[1905]] — [[1913]], [[1919]] — [[1920]] (wings added)
113: | [[1919]] — [[1932]]
193: | [[1919]] — [[1928]] (Legislative Building) - History of China (45919 bytes)
28: ...g the [[Spring and Autumn Period]] when regional feudal lords began to assert their power, absorb smal...
44: ...nvasions and struggles of [[consort clan]]s and [[eunuch]]s. The [[Yellow Turban Rebellion]] broke out...
63: ...ina. Later on, [[Emperor Taiwu of Northern Wei]] reunified north China again, marking the beginning of...
72: == Sui Dynasty: Reunification ==
74: ...he [[Sui Dynasty]] (隋朝) managed to reunite the country in [[589]] after almost 300 years... - 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.
32: ...n]] <td>[[12 July]] [[1905]] <td>[[18 January]] [[1919]]<td> suffered from epilepsy, raised apart from h... - Nancy Astor, Viscountess Astor (3681 bytes)
4: ...ilroad tycoon [[Chiswell Dabney Langhorne]] (1843-1919) and his wife, [[Anne Witcher Keene]]. Her sister...
8: ...quired by-election. Elected on [[November 28]], [[1919]], in December she became the second woman electe... - Alexandra Kollontai (3203 bytes)
7: ...ng the [[Zhenodtel]] or "Women's Department" in [[1919]]. This organization worked to improve the condit... - Constance Georgine, Countess Markiewicz (3360 bytes)
10: ...clined to take her seat on release from prison in 1919. Instead she joined her colleagues assembled in ...
12: ... Dᩬ. Holding cabinet rank from April to August 1919, she became the first Irish female [[Cabinet Mini... - Millicent Fawcett (1226 bytes)
5: ...WSS]]), a position she held from [[1897]] until [[1919]]. - Rosa Luxemburg (23905 bytes)
2: ...uccessful [[revolution]] in Berlin in January, [[1919]]. The uprising was carried out against Rosa's or...
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...
42: ...n [[Berlin]] by the Freikorps on [[15 January]] [[1919]] and murdered on the same day. Luxemburg was bat... - Madalyn Murray O'Hair (6271 bytes)
1: ...Murray O<nowiki>'</nowiki>Hair''' ([[April 13]] [[1919]] - [[1995]]) was an [[United States|American]] [... - George Eliot (6014 bytes)
8: ...ls. In [[1854]], she published a translation of Feuerbach's ''Essence of Christianity'', and it was a...
47: * ''[[Early Essays]]'' (1919) - Mary Pickford (7523 bytes)
28: * [[1919]]: A very astute business person, she founded [[U...
30: ...ow known as the [[University Cathedral]] of [[Dr. Eugene Scott]]. - Amelia Earhart (9225 bytes)
8: ...ing after wounded soldiers of [[World War I]]. In 1919 she enrolled as a pre-medical student at [[Columb...
14: ...ngress, the Cross of Knight of the [[L駩on d'honneur|Legion of Honor]] from the French Government, an... - Marina Tsvetaeva (21885 bytes)
8: ...II Museum, which is now known as the [[Pushkin Museum]] of Fine Arts. Tsvetaeva's mother, Maria Alexan...
18: ...me year as her father's project, the [[Pushkin Museum]] of Fine Arts was ceremonially opened, attended...
20: ...my]], and Marina returned to Moscow hoping to be reunited with her husband. She was trapped in Moscow ...
24: ... no way to support herself or her daughters. In [[1919]], she placed Irina in a state orphanage, mistake...
26: ...svetaeva and Alya left the Soviet Union and were reunited with Efron in [[Berlin]]. In Berlin, she pub... - Virginia Woolf (9482 bytes)
32: *''Night and Day'' ([[1919]])
56: *''Modern Fiction'' ([[1919]]) - Ruth Benedict (3045 bytes)
7: ... graduate studies at [[Columbia University]] in [[1919]], studying under [[Franz Boas]], receiving her [... - Emmy Noether (2715 bytes)
10: ...se." She was finally admitted to the faculty in [[1919]]. A [[Jew]], Noether was forced to flee [[Nazi]]... - Jane Delano (3466 bytes)
1: ... York]], [[United States]] ? died [[April 15]], [[1919]] in [[Savenay]], [[Loire-Atlantique]], [[France]... - Mary Edwards Walker (4835 bytes)
2: ...[[November]], [[1832]] – [[February 21]], [[1919]]) was a versatile woman — a [[Feminism|fem... - Josephine Baker (5957 bytes)
7: ...ally naked on stage. After a successful tour of [[Europe]], she returned to [[France]], where she star...
11: ...me she also scored her greatest song hit "''J'ai deux amours''" (1931) and became a muse for contempor...
17: ...another expatriate American entertainer living in Europe.
21: ...rough six marriages: foundry worker Willie Wells (1919, divorced), Pullman porter William Howard Baker (... - Ellen G. White (5403 bytes)
3: ... in [[Australia]] and some short visitations to [[Europe]].
33: ...was D.M. Canright. The criticisms he makes in his 1919 book, "Life of Mrs. E.G. White Seventh-day Advent...
View (previous 20) (next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).