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- Steel (28384 bytes)
1: :''See [[Steel (disambiguation)]] for other uses.''
3: ...ut is also more [[brittle]]. One classical definition is that steels are iron-carbon alloys with up to...
5: ...n, if present, is undesired. A more recent definition is that steels are iron-based alloys that can be...
8:
10: ...[[iron ore]] pellets will be used in steel production.]] - Melisende of Jerusalem (16880 bytes)
5: ...li|countess of Tripoli]]; and [[Ioveta of Bethany|Ioveta]], abbess of St. Lazarus in [[Bethany (Israel...
9: ...lisendem, Deo amabilem reginam, cui jure hereditario competebat." Melisende was no mere regent-queen (...
11: ...er nobles and Christian clergy in ceremonial occasions. Increasingly she was associated with her fathe...
13: ...e Melisende sole queen and to strengthen her position, he designated Melisende as guardian for the you...
15: ...the members of the ''Haute Cour'', whose own positions would be eroded if Fulk continued to dominate t... - Agnes of Courtenay (6051 bytes)
3: ...t of [[Edessa, Mesopotamia|Edessa]] was lost in [[1150]]. Her first husband was Reynald of Marash, who l...
5: ...ted to in the Chronicle of [[Ernoul]], a continuation of William; "car telle n'est que roine doie iest...
7: ... Countess of Jaffa and Ascalon and received a pension from that fief's income. Agnes soon thereafter m...
9: ...a of Jerusalem|Isabella]]. There was no such questioning of Baldwin's rights.
13: ...e conservative and less adventurous in their decision. In 1180 she gave support to the marriage of [[G... - Hildegard of Bingen (14070 bytes)
1: ...ge:Hildegard.jpg|right|framed|A medieval illumination showing Hildegard von Bingen and the monk Volmar...
6: ...tta's death in [[1136]] Hildegard was chosen superior of the community, and eventually moved the group...
8: .... At first she was hesitant about writing her visions, holding them inside. She was finally convinced...
11: ...write down everything she would observe in her visions.
12: ...nd suddenly I understood of the meaning of expositions of the books... - Medieval art (6359 bytes)
3: ...h Africa. It includes the major art movements, national art, genres, revivals, the artists crafts, and...
5: ...e art]] and [[Islamic art]]. In addition each "nation" or culture in the Middle Ages had its own disti...
13: ... based on about nine large-scale movements, or periods.
15: ...the production of art in the East. During this period Christian artists adopted the Roman crafts of pa...
17: ...en finally late in the period some Viking inspirations were added in Ireland. - Blast furnace (4721 bytes)
1: ...e surface. Typically this is used for the production of [[pig iron]] from [[iron ore]].
4: ...t in [[Sweden]] at Lapphyttan, sometime between [[1150]] and [[1350]]. It is unclear whether the blast ...
6: ...uel)|coke]] instead of [[charcoal]]. [[Deforestation]] in Europe had progressed to the point that fue...
9: ...nto the middle, thus the "blast", allowing combustion in the middle of the mixture. The results of th...
11: The exact nature of the reaction is: - Medieval music (31843 bytes)
7: ...omplexity in harmony, rhythm, text, and orchestration.
9: ...y of chant, with unison voice and natural declamation, is most common.
11: ...between multiple vocals lines in a repeatable fashion. The use of multiple texts and instrumental acc...
14: ...n]] was a relatively late development, reconstruction of this music, especially before the [[12th cent...
16: === Theory and notation === - Castle (27805 bytes)
1: ...s]], usually of the [[Middle Ages]], though traditionally in Britain it has also referred to [[Prehist...
2: ...rom the late 15th century, their "castle" designations, relics of the [[feudalism|feudal]] age, often ...
10: ... First and foremost castles were places of protection from an invading enemy, a place of retreat. This...
14: ...easons: territorial expansion and control of a region. A castle was a stronghold from which a lord or ...
15: ...what he liked without fear, relying on the protection of the castle, while others, if they tried anyth... - Phoenix, Arizona (34271 bytes)
5: ...ssing [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania]] with 1.5 million people
6: ...opolitan area of the United States, with a population of 3,251,876 (2000 census)
7: * the largest capital city by area and population in the U.S. (including [[Washington, DC]])
46: ... on the [[Salt River]] and [[Gila River]] reservations, or the [[Tohono O'odham]] Indians who live in ...
53: ...enix'', memorializing the birth of a new civilization from the ruins left by the Hohokam. - Des Moines, Iowa (13222 bytes)
2: ...StateCapitol.jpg|thumb|300px|The State Capitol of Iowa, featuring its golden dome.]]
4: ...]) is the capital city of the [[U.S. state]] of [[Iowa]], which was incorporated on [[September 22]], ...
5: ...://www.ci.des-moines.ia.us/departments/AC/Information/AChistoricalinfo.htm]
6: ...]]. According to the [[2000]] census, the population of the city is 198,682.
9: [[Image:Iowa_state_map.jpg|thumb|250px|Image provided by [ht... - List of philosophers (79981 bytes)
30: *[[Giorgio Agamben]]
81: *[[Antiochus of Ascalon]], (c. 130-68 BC){{fn|C}}{{fn|O}}{...
97: *[[Ariston of Chios]], (fl. 250 BC){{fn|R}}
131: *[[Alain Badiou]], (born 1937)
170: *[[Vissarion Belinsky]], (1811-1848){{fn|R}} - Olmec (8916 bytes)
1: ...element common to later [[Mesoamerica]]n civilizations.
4: ...mec response to this environment was the construction of permanent city-temple complexes. The best-kno...
6: ... of the region and used for recreational and religious purposes – certainly they were playing it...
8: ...every other Mexican and Central American civilization that followed.
14: ...ance and provided the social basis for the production of the symbolic and sophisticated luxury artefac... - Sumer (14409 bytes)
5: ...umerians. Some archeologists have advanced the notion that the Sumerians were, in fact, local to the M...
10: ... king, who was intimately tied to the city's religious rites.
14: ... [[Enmebaragesi]] of Kish, whose name is also mentioned in the [[Gilgamesh]] epics. This has led some...
16: ...state of [[Umma]], arch-rival of Lagash. In addition, his realm extended to parts of [[Elam]] and alo...
21: ...ere in turn defeated by the [[Elamites]] around [[1150 BC]]. - Ashkelon (5935 bytes)
6: ...Byzantine]], [[Islam]]ic, and [[Crusade]]r occupation.
10: ... capacious that later Roman and Islamic fortifications, faced with stone, followed the same footprint,...
12: ...Testament]] prophets, a proscribed Canaanite religious practice that the [[Hebrews]] only too easily f...
14: ... of its kind, imitated even in Cyprus, and he mentions that this temple was pillaged by marauding "Scy...
16: ...ntinued to flourish in the Roman and Byzantine periods. - Erbium (9509 bytes)
10: [[Periodic_table_(standard)|Full table]]</small></div>
21: ...p|Group]], [[periodic table period|Period]], [[periodic table block|Block]]
22: | NA, [[period 6 element|6]], [[f-block|f]]
44: | [[Electron configuration]]
50: | [[Oxidation state]]s ([[Oxide]]) - Iron (23778 bytes)
10: <div align="right"><small>[[Periodic table (standard)|Full table]]</small></div>
19: ...]] </td><td>[[transition metal]]</td></tr>
21: ...p|Group]], [[periodic table period|Period]], [[periodic table block|Block]]</td>
22: <td>[[group 8 element|8 (VIIIB)]], [[period 4 element|4]], [[d-block|d]]</td></tr>
38: ...ius]] </td><td>no information</td></tr> - Silicon (13233 bytes)
3: {{Elementbox_groupperiodblock | group=14 | period=3 | block=p }}
8: {{Elementbox_section_physicalprop | color1=#cccc99 | color2=black }}
14: {{Elementbox_heatfusion_kjpmol | 50.21 }}
18: {{Elementbox_section_atomicprop | color1=#cccc99 | color2=black }}
22: {{Elementbox_ionizationenergies4 | 786.5 | 1577.1 | 3231.6 }} - History of science in the Middle Ages (30877 bytes)
2: ...d in a traditional schematic [[Periodization|division of European history]]. Although the term 'Middle...
4: ... was renewed. Science developed in this golden period of [[Scholasticism|Scholastic philosophy]] focus...
6: ...medieval men of science went in search of explanations for the phenomena of the [[universe]] and achie...
14: ... Church|Catholic Church]], being the only institution to survive the process, maintained what was left...
16: ...s mostly based on previous ignorance about the period combined with popular [[stereotype]]s. - Elamite Empire (23098 bytes)
4: ...[[539 BC]], with a preceding [[Proto-Elamite]] period beginning around [[3200 BC]].
8: ...tes this word was borrowed prehistorically). Additionally, the Haltamti were known as ''Elam'' in the ...
10: ... empire, the Elamites had extended their civilisation into the province of [[Fars]] in prehistoric tim...
13: ... by some theorists with the [[Harappan]] civilisation found in the Indus Valley somewhat to the East, ...
17: ...g bull holding a spouted vessel, Proto-Elamite period; 3100?2900 BCE, Iran, kept at The Metropolitan M...
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