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- Eleanor of Aquitaine (11927 bytes)
1: [[Image:ELEANOROFAQUITAINE.jpg|right|frame|Eleanor of Aquitaine]]
3: ...iddle Ages]]. She was [[Queen consort]] of both [[France]] and [[England]] in her lifetime.
8: ...chest of the provinces that would become modern [[France]], when her brother, William Aigret, died as ...
10: ...|Louis VI]] had died, and Eleanor became Queen of France.
12: ... of women in the campaign, with her, the Queen of France, as their leader. - Flora Tristan (1707 bytes)
3: ...Spanish Armada]], and her mother, Anne Laisney, a Frenchwoman. Her parents met in [[Bilbao, Spain]] du...
5: ...ation of Flora and her mother changed drastically from the high standards of living they were accustom...
7: ...fe through their experiences outside their native France. - Pytheas (6447 bytes)
1: ...ography|geographer]] and [[exploration|explorer]] from the [[Phocaean]] colony [[Massilia]] (today Mar...
6: ...has him traveling from Marseille in succession to Bordeaux, Nantes, Land's End, Plymouth, Isle of Man, Outer...
8: ...d closed the [[Strait of Gibraltar]] to all ships from other nations. Some historians therefore believ...
12: ... of [[cereal|grain]] and honey. Unlike the people from southern Europe, they had [[barn (building)|bar...
30: *Frye, J. & Frye H. (1985) ''North to Thule: An imagined narrati... - List of popes (77758 bytes)
25: | <small>Disciple of [[Jesus]] from whom, according to {{bibleverse||Matthew|16:18-...
91: | <small>[[Aquileia]], Friuli, Italy</small>
119: | <small>[[North Africa|Northern Africa]]</small>
165: ===From 250===
255: | <small>Africa</small> - Charles de Gaulle (41586 bytes)
1: ''This article refers to the former French president, Charles de Gaulle. For the [[Paris...
10: | [[President of France]]
13: | From [[January 8]], [[1959]]<br> to [[April 28]], [[...
40: ...|French military]] leader and statesman. ({{audio|fr-Charles_de_Gaulle.ogg|pronunciation of his name}}...
42: ...ism]], which left a major influence in subsequent French politics. - Michel de Montaigne (5245 bytes)
2: ...ember 13]], [[1592]]) was an influential [[France|French]] [[Renaissance]] writer, generally consider...
6: ...Bordeaux]]. His mother, Antoniette de Lopez, came from a Spanish Jewish family, but was herself raised...
8: ...g at the Bordeaux Parlement, he became very close friends with the humanist writer [[Étienne de...
16: ...ce, respected both by the Catholic [[Henry III of France|King Henry III]] and the Protestant [[Henry o...
18: ...one]]s. From 1580 to 1581, Montaigne travelled in France, Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Italy, par... - Hundred Years' War (30012 bytes)
3: ...ovince (or a group of provinces) within the Anglo-French unit" that was both battlefield and prize (Br...
8: ... the conflict can be found 400 years earlier when Frankish [[Carolingian]] ruler [[Charles the Simple]...
10: ...ns who still spoke a version of [[French language|French]], and could remember a time when their grand...
13: ...ng three male heirs. The eldest son, [[Louis X of France|Louis X]], died in [[1316]], leaving only a d...
15: ...ide in favor of the last brother, [[Charles IV of France|Charles IV]], without question. - Auto racing (15302 bytes)
8: ...aged, from [[Paris]], [[France]] to [[Bordeaux]], France. First over the line was [[ɭile Levassor]] b...
12: ...go]], [[Illinois]] on [[November 2]], [[1895]], [[Frank Duryea]] winning in 10 h and 23 min, beating t...
16: ..., connecting with another major city in Europe or France.
18: ...aused the French government to stop the race in [[Bordeaux]] and ban open-road racing.
23: ...to 450 kW with the aid of multiple superchargers. From [[1928]]-[[1930]] and again in [[1934]]-[[1936]... - List of dog breeds (16959 bytes)
1: ...he same ancestral lines, sometimes by mixing dogs from very different lines. The process continues to...
51: *[[Anglo-Francais de Petite Venerie]]
97:
125: *[[Braque Francais (Gascogne type)]]
126: *[[Braque Francais (Pyrenean type)]] - Mastiff (3597 bytes)
4: ...ng "mountain-like". Related words are "molosser" (from [[Molossia]], a country once located in what is...
8: Some of today's Mastiff breeds come from the [[British Isles]] and points farther north,...
10: The Bulldog breeds split from the Mastiffs in England and spread to the New W...
26: *[[Boerboel]] (South-African Mastiff)
33: *[[Dogue de Bordeaux]] (French Mastiff) - Roman road (3913 bytes)
4: ...e that they kept dry, as the water would flow out from the crushed stone, instead of becoming mud in c...
14: ===[[France]]===
15: ... the [[Atlantic Ocean]] across [[Toulouse]] and [[Bordeaux]],
16: * [[Via Domitia]] ([[118 BC]]), from [[Nimes]] to the [[Pyrenees]], where it joins t...
20: * [[Via Aemilia]], from [[Rimini|Ariminum]] to [[Piacenza]] - History of sociology (4929 bytes)
7: ... term was coined by [[Auguste Comte]] in [[1838]] from [[Latin]] ''socius'' (companion, associate) and...
9: ...iology was founded in 1895 at the [[University of Bordeaux]] by [[ɭile Durkheim]], founder of [[Ann饠Socio...
12: ... larger [[International Sociologist Association]] from [[1949]]. In 1905 the [[American Sociological A...
14: ... [[Ferdinand Toennies]], [[ɭile Durkheim]], [[Vilfredo Pareto]], and [[Max Weber]]. In a manner simil...
17: ...piricism]], allowed sociology to be distinguished from [[theology]] and [[metaphysics]] and be recogni... - Neapolitan Mastiff (2939 bytes)
49: ...t Mastiff breeds: [[English Mastiff]], [[Dogue de Bordeaux]], [[Spanish Mastiff]], [[St. Bernard (dog)|St. B... - Lithography (5288 bytes)
6: Lithography, from the Greek words for "stone" and "to write," was...
22: ...ucing the effect of drawings. Famous artists like Francisco Goya and later, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec,...
37: ...t the time, the most complete range of line color from white to black.
39: ...st's lithographs" that sparked a flood of (mostly French) artists who dabbled in lithography, includin...
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