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- Puritan (15882 bytes)
1: ...f radical [[Protestants]] which developed in [[England]] after the [[Reformation]].
4: ...e'' of religious innovation, rather than a particular church. The closest analogy in the present day t...
5: ...ractitioners knew themselves as members of particular churches or movements, and not by the simple and...
8: ...ient to politics. Persecuted under [[Mary I of England]] ("Bloody Mary"), Protestants like [[Thomas Ca...
10: ...tice, by contact with pagan civilizations (particularly [[Ancient Rome|Rome]]), by the impositions of ... - Artemisia Gentileschi (23093 bytes)
3: ...] painters in the generation influenced by [[Michelangelo Merisi|Caravaggio]] (the ''"Caravaggisti"'')...
10: ...f [[Caravaggio]] without being indifferent to the language of the [[Bologna]] school (which had [[Anni...
12: ... Artemisia in order to restore her reputation, he later reneged on his promise and Orazio reported Tas...
14: ...e fingers and tighted by degrees — a particularly cruel torture to a painter. Both procedures we...
18: ...patronage of the [[Medici]] and [[Charles I of England|Charles I]]. During this period, Artemisia also... - Adam and Eve (8913 bytes)
1: ...250px|thumb|right|''God creates Adam'', by [[Michelangelo]]. The mural on the ceiling of the [[Sistine...
5: ...1570;دم (ʾĀdam) in [[Arabic language|Arabic]]—means "man," "earthy," or "[...
11: ...nglish poet]] and [[Painting|painter]] [[William Blake]] ([[1808]]).]]
15: ...ters two and three. After his creation, Adam was placed in the Garden of Eden to cultivate it, and to ...
17: ...ll living. Being induced by the [[serpent]] (whom later tradition made into Satan) to eat the forbidde... - List of painters (54090 bytes)
5: Shortcuts to highly popular [[painter]]s:
8: *[[Salvador Dali]], ([[1904]]-[[1989]]), Catalan artist
10: *[[Michelangelo Buonarroti]], ([[1475]]-[[1564]]), Italian [...
12: *[[Claude Monet]], ([[1840]]-[[1926]]), French [[Impress...
16: *[[Rembrandt]], ([[1606]]-[[1669]]), [[Netherlands|Dutch]] [[painter]] - Timeline of microscope technology (1673 bytes)
5: ...sen and his son [[Zacharias Janssen]], claimed by later writers ([[Pierre Borel]] 1620 - 1671 or 1628 ...
7: ...[[1612]] - Galileo presents ''occhiolino'' to [[Poland|Polish]] king [[Sigismund I of Sweden|Sigismund...
11: * [[1625]] - Giovanni Faber of Bamberg ([[1574]] - [[1629]... - Pirate Ship (44502 bytes)
1: ...s, until this form of [[commerce raiding]] was outlawed in the 19th century.
4: ...o [[justice]].<ref>{{cite news |first=M.Chiarugi |last=D.Archibugi |url=http://www.opendemocracy.net/a...
10: ...zed in kidnapping boys and girls to be sold as [[slave]]s.<ref>[http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/P...
16: ...Illyrians]], populating the western Balkan peninsula. Constantly raiding the [[Adriatic Sea]], the Ill...
18: ...[Galatia]] and [[Cappadocia]], and Gothic pirates landed on [[Cyprus]] and [[Crete]]. In the process, ... - Henry Hudson (4760 bytes)
1: ...are unknown, but [[September 12]], [[1570]] in England seems likely, and he is presumed to have died i...
3: ...son discovered what is now known as [[Jan Mayen Island]] before reaching home in September.
7: ...r]], which bears his name. The Dutch would later claim the area and set up a colony as [[New Amsterdam...
9: ...], a set of [[Mercantilism|mercantilist]] laws England had enacted to protect its trade routes from th...
11: ... managing to turn around the southern tip of Greenland and continue west. - Augusta, Maine (4876 bytes)
1: {{Template:US City infobox|
5: flag = No image.png |
24: ...e tide". As of the [[2000]] census, it has a population of 18,560. It is the [[county seat]] of [[Ke...
25: ...x|Image provided by [http://classroomclipart.com Classroom Clipart]]]
28: ...nglish settlers from the [[Plymouth Colony]] in [[1625]] as a trading post. Located on the Kennebec Rive... - List of astronomers (40322 bytes)
19: *[[George Biddell Airy]], ([[England]], [[1801]] – [[1892]])
23: *[[V. Albitskij|Vladimir Aleksandrovich Al'bitskij]] ([[Russia]])
28: *[[Lawrence Aller]]
38: *[[Friedrich Wilhelm August Argelander]] ([[Germany]], [[1799]] – [[1875]])
56: *[[Benjamin Baillaud]] ([[France]], [[1848]] – [[1934]]) - History of Germany (53864 bytes)
3: ...ly unified into a single political unit until the late 19th century, they exerted influence upon Weste...
5: ...reign was usually the German king, and the German lands were always its chief component. After the mid...
17: ... Chatti, Bajuwari, Saxons, Frisians, Thuringians, Langobardi. Around 260 AD, the Germans finally broke...
19: ...e without losing contact with their own ancestral land. The mingling of Germanic traditions and the Ch...
23: ...ished to spread the Christian faith in the German lands. - Germany in the Middle Ages (53864 bytes)
3: ...ly unified into a single political unit until the late 19th century, they exerted influence upon Weste...
5: ...reign was usually the German king, and the German lands were always its chief component. After the mid...
17: ... Chatti, Bajuwari, Saxons, Frisians, Thuringians, Langobardi. Around 260 AD, the Germans finally broke...
19: ...e without losing contact with their own ancestral land. The mingling of Germanic traditions and the Ch...
23: ...ished to spread the Christian faith in the German lands. - Elamite Empire (23098 bytes)
1: :''For biblical characters named Elam, see [[Elam (Hebrew Bible)]].''
4: ...700 BC]] to [[539 BC]], with a preceding [[Proto-Elamite]] period beginning around [[3200 BC]].
5: Its culture played a crucial role in the [[Achaemenid]] [[Persian...
8: ...offspring of Elam, eldest son of [[Shem]] (see [[Elam (Hebrew Bible)]]).
10: ...e Old Persian root ''Hujiyā'', which means "Elam."
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