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  1. Steller's Sea Eagle (1501 bytes)

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  1. King Arthur (22450 bytes)
    2: [[Image:Arthur3487.jpg|right|framed|Victorian image of '''King Arthur''' in plate...
    7: Some members of this school, most notably Geoffrey Ashe and Leon Fleuriot, have argued for identif...
    19: ..., chief giver of feasts, with his tall blades red from the battle which all men remember."
    25: ...r's soldiers; Arthur was awarded a herd of cattle from Cadoc as [[wergeld]] for his men; Cadoc deliver...
    29: ...tury]] at Cadbury Castle, and in several parts of France.
  2. Tallulah Bankhead (6331 bytes)
    4: ...[John H. Bankhead]] ([[1842]]-[[1920]]) (Democrat from Alabama [[1907]]-[[1920]]).
    20: In 1944, [[Alfred Hitchcock]] cast her as journalist and cynic Co...
    24: ...falling star in the Sixties. Bankhead never faded from the public eye, but was increasingly a caricatu...
    26: ...ad died in New York City of [[pneumonia]] arising from [[influenza]], complicated further by [[emphyse...
    28: ...he was married only once, to actor [[John Emery]] from 1937-1941.
  3. Liver (11441 bytes)
    1: ...e liver often start in ''hepato-'' or ''hepatic'' from the [[Greek language|Greek]] word for liver, ''...
    7: ...liac trunk]]. The portal vein brings venous blood from the digestive tract, so that the liver can proc...
    9: ...to form the common hepatic duct. The cystic duct (from the gallbladder) joins with the common hepatic ...
    14: ...m]], a thin, double-layered membrane that reduces friction against other organs. The peritoneum folds ...
    16: The [[falciform ligament]] is visible on the front ([[anterior]] side) of the liver. This divides...
  4. Heraldry (23465 bytes)
    3: ... a shield are described from the top to the base, from dexter to sinister. Dexter ("right" in [[Latin]...
    14: ...huthatswana]] and some Algerian civic heraldry of French colonial origin, specific shapes of shield ar...
    28: ...The names of the tinctures mainly come to us from French. The first rule of heraldry is the rule of ti...
    69: ...he blazon, but the College of Arms has moved away from this practice in recent years.
    75: ...shares their shape. (It should be noticed that [[French heraldry]] takes a different approach in many...
  5. Portugal (61755 bytes)
    5: ... the country's early history, stemming as it does from the Roman name ''Portus Cale'', a possibly mixe...
    15: ...C]], several waves of [[Celts]] invaded Portugal from [[Central Europe]] and intermarried with local ...
    17: ...Portugal started from the south, where they found friendly natives, the [[Conii]]. Over decades, the R...
    25: ...s. From there they aimed to reconquer their lands from the [[Moors]] (mainly [[Berber]] with some [[Ar...
    27: ...r of the Iberian Peninsula, faced new competition from other regions. The lords of the cities of [[Coi...
  6. Slovenia (19318 bytes)
    37: established_dates = From [[Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia|Yugo...
    54: ...rope]], [[NATO]], and has observer status in [[La Francophonie]].
    59: ...its independence, being largely subsumed into the Frankish empire. Many [[Slavs]] [[christianization|c...
    61: The [[Freising manuscripts]], the earliest surviving writt...
    65: ...med on [[25 June]] [[1991]] upon its independence from Yugoslavia. Slovenia joined [[NATO]] on [[29 Ma...
  7. United Kingdom (37269 bytes)
    10: ...t mon droit]] (Royal motto)<br>([[French language|French]]: God and my right)''<sup>2</sup></small> |
    56: ...r, although there is also a nominal frontier with France in the middle of the [[Channel Tunnel]]. The ...
    62: ...d). This political usage of "Great Britain" dates from the personal union of the Crowns of Scotland an...
    64: The [[British Isles]] is a term frequently used to refer to the [[archipelago]] whic...
    71: ...nce]] of [[Ulster]], immediately opted out of the Free State and to remain in the UK. The nomenclature...
  8. Flag of Iowa (716 bytes)
    3: ...[[1921]]. It was designed by Mrs. Dixie Debhardt, from the Daughters of the American Revolution of Iow...
  9. Flag of Michigan (1261 bytes)
    5: The design features three [[Latin]] mottos. From top-to-bottom they are:
  10. Flag of the State of New York (833 bytes)
    10: The motto ''Excelsior'' is derived from [[Latin]], and means "Ever Upward."
  11. Flag of Oklahoma (562 bytes)
  12. Flag of Pennsylvania (547 bytes)
  13. Ancient Greece (23806 bytes)
    2: ...t are now [[Albania]], [[Bulgaria]], [[Egypt]], [[France]], [[Libya]], [[Romania]], [[Spain]], and [[U...
    4: ...izations, while Greek-speaking, were so different from later Greek cultures that they should be classe...
    14: [[Image:vcycladic.jpg|thumb|left|Marble statuette from the Cycladic islands, 3000 BC]]
    15: ...th century BC is a "[[Greek Dark Ages|dark age]]" from which no primary texts, and only scant archaeol...
    20: ..., where every island, valley and plain is cut off from its neighbours by the sea or mountain ranges.
  14. Idaho (13962 bytes)
    48: ...rst organized town in Idaho was [[Franklin, Idaho|Franklin]], settled in [[1860]] by [[Mormon]] pionee...
    50: ... was abated by moving the [[University of Idaho]] from its planned location in Eagle Rock (near [[Idah...
    54: ...Anne Frank and many other writers extolling human freedom and equality.
    63: ...s. Idaho has a [[bicameral]] legislature, elected from 35 legislative districts, each represented by o...
    83: ...]]. [[Shoshone Falls]] plunges down rugged cliffs from a height greater than that of [[Niagara Falls]]...
  15. Utah (29154 bytes)
    74: ...e most popular destinations. The name ''Utah'' is from the [[Southern Ute language]] and means "higher...
    85: [[Francisco Vᳱuez de Coronado]] may have crossed int...
    96: ...ce Brigham Young as territorial governor with [[Alfred Cumming]]. The resulting conflict is known as t...
    98: ...nd [[Paiutes]] attacked and killed 120 immigrants from [[Missouri]], an event called the [[Mountain Me...
    100: ...ng, Johnston established Fort Floyd 40 miles away from Salt Lake City, to the southwest.
  16. Texas (39610 bytes)
    38: ...nguage]] of the [[Hasinai]], ''tejas'', meaning ''friends'' or ''allies''; [[Spain|Spanish]] explorers...
    42: ...ist of U.S. state mottos | state motto]] &mdash; "Friendship"
    50: ** flying &mdash; [[Mexican free-tailed bat]]
    57: ...om you talk to (and which part of Texas they come from), Texas forms part of the [[U.S. Southern State...
    62: ...ve flown over its soil: the [[Fleur-de-lis]] of [[France]], and the national flags of [[Spain]], [[Mex...
  17. Minnesota (26682 bytes)
    37: Its name is from the [[Lakota#The_Dakota|Dakota people's]] name ...
    54: Much of the state was purchased from [[France]] as part of the [[Louisiana Purchase]], alth...
    59: ...e [[M鴩s people (Canada)|M鴩s]] people, a mixed French and Native American culture, were a presence ...
    61: Modern [[immigrant]]s have come from all over the world in recent decades, with [[Hm...
    63: ...with the early Scandinavian immigrants. Families frequently own or share [[cabin]]s on central and no...
  18. New Hampshire (23166 bytes)
    36: ... the most famous of all [[state motto]]s: "[[Live free or die]]".
    51: ... modern [[Republican Party]] by [[Amos Tuck]] and friends. New Hampshire grew as a hotbed of [[Aboliti...
    58: ...ther [[John H. Sununu]] was governor of the state from [[1983]]&ndash;[[1988]]. [[List of New Hampshir...
    60: ...ampshire)| Executive Council]] that is a holdover from the [[Governor's Council]] of the Colonial era....
    66: ...ermont]] voted on [[March 2]], [[2004]] to secede from [[Vermont]] and join New Hampshire&mdash;a larg...
  19. Aeschylus (5184 bytes)
    7: Aeschylus frequently travelled to [[Sicily]], where the [[tyra...
    11: ...is gravestone covers Aeschylus, son of Euphorion, from Athens, who died in fertile Gela.
    32: In early [[1990]]s fragments of another Aeschylus play, which had been ...
    46: ===Fragments===
    47: ...sad.ox.ac.uk/POxy/VExhibition/2161.htm Photo of a fragment of ''The Net-pullers'']
  20. Albania (24647 bytes)
    25: | [[Alfred Moisiu|Alfred Moisiu]], <small>''President''</small>
    43: | From the [[Ottoman Empire]]<br>[[November 28]], [[19...
    66: ...highlands". Alternatively, "Albania" may derive from the ancient [[Proto-Indo-European|Indo-European...
    68: ...e-names ending in ''-esh'' that appears to derive from the latin ''-enisis'' or ''-esis'', between the...
    72: ...://foreignaffairs.tripod.com/armillotta/albania01_frosina.html Arb벥sh띮

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