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  1. Mexico (27255 bytes)
    2: ...ca]] and the most populous [[Spanish language|Spanish]]-speaking country in the world.
    16: ([[Spanish language|Spanish]]: ''Effective suffrage, no reelection)'' |
    18: official_languages = [[Spanish Language|Spanish]] |
    42: established_events = &nbsp;&bull; Declared<br>&nbsp;&bull;...
    43: established_dates = From [[Spain]]<br>[[September 16]], [[...
  2. List of U.S. state capitals (5230 bytes)
    2: This is a '''list of U.S. state capitals''':
    52: | [[Boise, Idaho|Boise]]
    55: | [[Illinois]]
    56: | [[Springfield, Illinois|Springfield]]
    57: | [[1867]] &mdash; [[1876]] (design), [[1884]] &mdash; [[1...
  3. List of explorers (24013 bytes)
    1: ...]]. Also, see [[International Space Station]] for ISS explorers, and for the [[Ford Motor Company|Ford...
    8: *[[Francisco de Almeida]] ([[16th century]] [[Portuguese]] n...
    11: ...cisco Alvarez]] ([[16th century]] [[Portuguese]] missionary and explorer in [[Ethiopia]])
    21: ...eorge Back]], (1796—1878), [[British Empire|British]] naval officer, several expeditions to the [[Ca...
    23: ... de Balboa]], (c. [[1475]]-[[1519]]), [[Spain|Spanish]], first to sight the [[Pacific Ocean]], founded...
  4. Steel (28384 bytes)
    1: :''See [[Steel (disambiguation)]] for other uses.''
    3: ...nically, alloys with higher carbon content than this are known as [[cast iron|iron]].
    5: ...f present, is undesired. A more recent definition is that steels are iron-based alloys that can be [[p...
    8: ...environment. Unlike copper and tin, liquid iron dissolves carbon quite readily, so that smelting resu...
    10: ...tningVolt Iron Ore Pellets.jpg|thumb|left|250px|This heap of [[iron ore]] pellets will be used in stee...
  5. Victoria of the United Kingdom (38571 bytes)
    7: ...e years &mdash; longer than that of any other British monarch. As well as being [[Monarch|queen]] of t...
    9: ...ria was marked by a great expansion of the [[British Empire]]. The [[Victorian era|Victorian Era]] wa...
    12: ...Princess Viktoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld]], the sister of Princess Charlotte's widower [[Leopold I of...
    14: ...erend [[George Davys]] and her governess was [[Louise Lehzen]].
    16: ...e. Since the law at that time made no special provision for a child monarch, Victoria would have been ...
  6. Mary of Teck (14662 bytes)
    3: ...lga Pauline Claudine Agnes) ([[May 26|26 May]], [[1867]] &ndash; [[March 24|24 March]], [[1953]]) was th...
    5: ... Mary was known for setting the tone of the [[British Royal Family]], as the model of regal formality ...
    9: ...ustria]]). Through the House of W?berg, Mary was distantly descended from the [[Habsburgs]], the once ...
    11: ...[Italy]], for a time. There Princess May enjoyed visiting the [[art gallery|art galleries]], [[church]...
    13: ... week without fail. During [[World War I]], the Swiss Embassy helped pass letters from Mary to her aun...
  7. The Valiant Five (3833 bytes)
    5: *[[Emily Murphy]] (the [[British Empire|British Empire's]] first woman judge);
    6: ...n's leader, activist and first woman [[Cabinet minister]] in Alberta);
    7: ...amous [[suffragist]] and member of the Alberta legislature);
    8: *[[Louise McKinney|Louise Crummy McKinney]] (one of two women first electe...
    11: ...ection 24 of the [[British North America Act]], [[1867]], included the possibility of women becoming [[S...
  8. Millicent Fawcett (1226 bytes)
    3: ...e usually militantly violent) and an early [[feminist]].
    5: ...ho was a Radical MP for [[Brighton]]. As a suffragist, she took a moderate line, but was a tireless ca...
    7: ... the British Empire]] in [[1924]], and her memory is still preserved in the name of the [[Fawcett Soci...
    9: ... of [[Elizabeth Garrett Anderson]], the first English female doctor, and the mother of [[Philippa Fawc...
  9. Sojourner Truth (2794 bytes)
    3: ...Wagener". The year of her birth is uncertain, but is usually taken to be 1797.
    5: ...anada]] in [[1827]]; after [[New York]] state abolished slavery, she returned there in [[1829]], worki...
    8: ...he became a noted speaker for both the [[Abolitionist]] movement and the [[women's rights]] movement. ...
    10: ... of Education and Industry. When the association disbanded in [[1846]], she remained in [[Florence, Ma...
    13: ...C.]], after the [[Emancipation Proclamation]] was issued to work with former slaves. She also met Pres...
  10. Ouida (1938 bytes)
    1: ... the [[England|English]] [[novelist]] '''Marie Louise de la Ram饧''.
    3: ... pen name from her own baby-talk nickname for "Louise". During her career, she wrote more than 40 [[no...
    8: ...ww.gutenberg.net/etext/13912 Gutenberg etext of this book]
    13: ...www.gutenberg.net/etext/1367 Gutenberg etext of this book]
    16: * ''Held in Bondage'' (1863) (first published with the title ''Granville de Vigne'')
  11. Marie Curie (5862 bytes)
    2: ... the [[Curie Institute|Curie Institutes]] in [[Paris]] and in [[Warsaw]].
    5: ... sister, she moved to [[Paris]] and studied [[chemistry]] and [[physics]] at the [[Sorbonne]], where s...
    7: ...r 26]]th Marie Curie announced the existence of this new substance.
    9: ...rating the radioactive components, and eventually isolated initially the chloride salts (refining radi...
    11: ...heir joint researches on the radiation phenomena discovered by Professor [[Henri Becquerel]]". She wa...
  12. Spleen (4479 bytes)
    1: ...], [[familial jaundice]], hereditary [[spherocytosis]], etc.), or for the removal of splenic tumours o...
    3: ...ons of the spleen reveal a red soft surface which is divided into red and white pulp. Red pulp corresp...
    5: ... ([[mononucleosis]]), and hereditary [[spherocytosis]].
    7: ...tions in the spleen during repeated sickle-cell crises.
    9: ...n [[heart]] is not equipped to handle the higher-viscosity blood.
  13. Cairo (12536 bytes)
    2: ... populous metropolitan area]] in the world. Cairo is located at 30&deg;2' North, 31&deg;13' East (30.0...
    4: ...the official name of the city, in local speech it is typically called simply by the name of the countr...
    6: ...irat Al Adaa" meaning "subduer of the enemies". This title was given to the city as many armies were d...
    11: ...ASAR Wide-Swath radar multicolour composite image is focused over the capital city of Cairo, Egypt, se...
    14: Cairo is located on the banks and islands of the [[Nile|Nile River]] in the north of E...
  14. Andrew Johnson (12662 bytes)
    32: | '''[[List of political parties in the United States|Politi...
    42: ...[[civil rights]] bills embroiled him in a bitter dispute with the Congressional Republicans, leading t...
    45: ... never attended any type of school; his wife has historically been credited with teaching him to read ...
    76: ...'[[Edwin M. Stanton]]'''||align="left"|1865&ndash;1867
    86: ...stmaster General]]||align="left"|'''[[William Dennison]]'''||align="left"|1865&ndash;1866
  15. William A. Wheeler (2833 bytes)
    46: ...gate to the state constitutional conventions in [[1867]] and [[1868]], and was elected to the Forty-firs...
  16. Canada (35540 bytes)
    1: ... the consensus that the country's *official* name is now "Canada", not anything else. If you believe y...
    3: ...e many "main" articles about Canada linked from this article, e.g., [[Politics of Canada]], [[Geograph...
    6: '''Canada''' is a country in [[North America]], the northern-most...
    8: ...|parliamentary]] [[representative democracy]] and is a [[constitutional monarchy]] with [[Elizabeth II...
    10: ...is 32.2 million people [http://www.statcan.ca/english/edu/clock/population.htm].
  17. South Africa (40100 bytes)
    1: ...]], [[Mozambique]] and [[Swaziland]]. [[Lesotho]] is an independent [[nation]], entirely surrounded by...
    3: ...k Willem de Klerk|F.W. de Klerk]] who started to dismantle it in [[1990]] after a long struggle by the...
    5: ...cies]] in Africa. The [[economy of South Africa]] is the largest and most well-developed of the entire...
    9: ...[Venda language|Venda]]. In this regard it is [[List of national languages of India|second only to In...
    11: The country also recognises eight non-official languages: [[Fanagalo langua...
  18. Slovakia (19892 bytes)
    20: | [[Bratislava]]
    25: | '''[[Prime Minister of Slovakia|Prime Minister]]'''
    29: | [[List of countries by area|Ranked 126th]] <br> [[1 E10...
    32: | [[List of countries by population|Ranked 103rd]]<br> 5,...
    35: |[[January 1]], [[1993]] (division of [[Czechoslovakia]])
  19. Romania (19812 bytes)
    1: ...⮩a) is a country in southeastern [[Europe]]. It is bordered by [[Ukraine]] and [[Moldova]] in the no...
    19: ...ident]] <br> [[Prime Minister of Romania|Prime Minister]] |
    38: established_events = <br> - Declared<br/> - Recognised |
    39: established_dates = [[Romanian War of Independence]]<br/>[...
    57: ...354;ara Rom⮥asc&#259;''" (The Romanian Country) is the Romanian name of the former principality of [...
  20. Hungary (18459 bytes)
    1: ...a]], [[Serbia]], [[Croatia]] and [[Slovenia]]. It is known locally as the ''Country of the [[Magyars]]...
    12: national_motto = (none current)<br>historical: Regnum Mariae Patrona Hungariae |
    13: national_anthem = Himnusz ([[Isten, ᬤd meg a magyart]]) |
    19: ...ent]]<br><br>[[Prime minister of Hungary|Prime minister]]|
    38: established_events = |

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