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- Grapefruit (4275 bytes)
24: ..., often increasing the effective potency of compounds. Grapefruit contains [[naringenin]] and [[bergam...
30: ...ng Grapefruit?] in the [[Chelsea Physic Garden]], london. - History of China (45919 bytes)
138: [[Kublai Khan]], grandson of [[Genghis Khan]], wanting to adopt [[Han Chi...
152: ...), imperial edicts in reply, reports of various kinds, and tax records.
168: ...endak, J.J.L. ''China’s Discovery of Africa'' (London: Probsthain, 1949)
180: ...risonment due to writings)] for controlling the minds and thoughts of Chinese. ''Wen Zi Yu'' forbade po...
182: ... works on Chinese culture was made. Tens of thousands of books viewed by Manchu emperors as politically... - King Arthur (22450 bytes)
15: ...torical persons may have influenced the later legends, like the [[Scots]] king [[Aedan mac Gabran]], wh...
27: ...sman, agrees to the request, and fulfills the demands of Olwen's [[giant]] father [[Ysbaddaden]], which...
29: This may be related to legends where Arthur is depicted as the leader of the [[W...
31: ...ditor of the Welsh Triads, matched it to Kelly Rounds, a [[hill fort]] in the Cornish parish of [[Eglos...
47: ...ury]] in [[Somerset]], [[England]]), where his wounds were healed or his body was buried in a chapel. S... - David Livingstone (4684 bytes)
6: ...whose daughter he later married, and joined the [[London Missionary Society]], becoming a minister.
19: ...ngstone experienced great difficulty in raising funds to further explore [[Africa]]. - Industrial Revolution (30001 bytes)
22: ...dn’t worry about law and order, and set their minds into manufacturing. People earned a lot of money ...
34: ... volumes of proceedings and transactions, and the London-based [[Society for the encouragement of Arts, Ma...
108: ...ar was used for the movement of goods to the Midlands which had been imported into [[Bristol]] from abr...
111: ...by a toll on the users. Major roads radiated from London and were the means by which the Royal Mail was ab...
114: ...gan in medieval times. The major seaports such as London, Bristol and Liverpool were the means by which ra... - Bagpipes (20858 bytes)
30: There are many kinds of bagpipes; the following is an overview of some...
47: ...ngly, tunes composed by pipers in civilian pipe bands.
56: ...hat much [[Northumberland|Northumbrian]] piping tends to be very [[staccato]] in style. The chanter ha...
69: ... and lower volume, suitable for playing in folk bands and at informal folk [[sessions]]. Other names fo...
72: ...cond octave, obtained by [[overblowing]]. Pipe bands and folk groups playing these instruments have be... - Ionic order (6526 bytes)
4: ... in [[Ionia]], the southwestern coastland and islands of [[Asia Minor]] settled by Ionian Greeks, where...
5: ...orus]] (enriched with interlaced guilloche) it stands upon.]]
10: ... on his [[Banqueting House at Whitehall]] Palace, London, and when Beaux-Arts architect [[John Russell Pop...
12: ...ce bult up with dentils (like the closely-spaced ends of joists), with a corona ("crown") and cyma ("og...
14: ...s of sturdy male body proportions while Ionic depends on "more graceful" female body proportions. Thoug... - November 4 (10686 bytes)
16: ...London Railway]]: [[London]]'s first deep-level [[London Underground|tube]] railway opens between [[King W...
28: ...evolution]] that started on [[October 23]]. Thousands are killed, more are wounded, and nearly a quarte...
38: ...me right-wing Israeli assassin. He dies of his wounds later that night in a Tel Aviv Hospital.
39: ...helle]] hits [[Cuba]], destroying crops and thousands of homes.
58: *[[1923]] - [[Freddy Heineken]], [[Netherlands|Dutch]] businessman (d. [[2002]]) - Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom (35966 bytes)
7: ...t Vincent and the Grenadines]], the [[Solomon Islands]], [[Tuvalu]] and the [[United Kingdom|United Kin...
15: ...th was born at 21 Bruton Street in [[Mayfair]], [[London]] on [[21 April]], [[1926]]. Her father was HRH [...
23: ...in Britain during World War II|evacuated]] to [[Windsor Castle]], Berkshire. There was some suggestion ...
27: ...s known as No 230873 Second Subaltern Elizabeth Windsor, and was trained as a driver. This training was...
33: ...lexandra of Denmark]], and the Duke is a great-grandson through [[George I of Greece]]). Prince Philip ... - Boudicca (6973 bytes)
9: ...ll and took over, depriving the nobles of their lands and plundering the kingdom. According to Tacitus,...
13: ...eached him, Suetonius hurried to [[Londinium]] ([[London]]), an important mercantile settlement, but concl...
15: ...robably in the [[West Midlands (region)|West Midlands]] somewhere along [[Watling Street]], in a defile...
17: ...it was at [[Kings Cross (London)|Kings Cross]] in London (a nearby street is named Battle Bridge Road), an... - Mary I of England (24813 bytes)
13: ...rn at the [[Palace of Placentia]] in [[Greenwich, London|Greenwich]] on Monday [[18 February]] [[1516]]. ...
17: ...s V]] by the [[Treaty of Windsor 1522|Treaty of Windsor]]. Within a few years, however, the engagement...
35: ...ort for the Lady Jane vanished and Mary rode into London triumphantly and unchallenged, with her half-sist...
37: ...en Gardiner]] from imprisonment in the [[Tower of London]].
44: ...the Lady Elizabeth was imprisoned in the Tower of London, but was put under house arrest in [[Woodstock Pa... - Elizabeth of Russia (14144 bytes)
15: ...[Anna of Russia|Anne]], consoled herself with a handsome young [[Cossack]], [[Aleksey Grigorievich Razu...
23: ...6th of December [[1741]], with a few personal friends, including her physician, Armand Lestocq, her cha...
33: ...rable enemies, most of whom were her personal friends. - Elizabeth I of England (34338 bytes)
25: ...with popular support, Mary rode triumphantly into London, her half-sister Elizabeth at her side.
27: ...ilure, Elizabeth was imprisoned in the [[Tower of London]]. The Spanish demanded Elizabeth's execution, bu...
49: ...mmons|House of Commons]] threatened to withhold funds until the Queen agreed to provide for the success...
55: ... her to France would put a powerful pawn in the hands of the French King; forcefully restoring her to t...
59: ...lved in putting down a rebellion in the [[Netherlands]], and could not afford to declare war on England... - Mary II of England (12093 bytes)
11: Mary, who was born in [[London]], was the eldest daughter of the Duke of York (t...
15: ...ts. The first cousins Mary and William married in London on [[4 November]] [[1677]].
17: Mary went to [[the Netherlands]], where she lived with her husband. She did not ...
22: ...y requested William III—then in the Netherlands with Mary—to come to England with an army. ...
28: The [[Bishop of London]], [[Henry Compton]], crowned William and Mary to... - Victoria of the United Kingdom (38571 bytes)
9: ...ver]]; her successor belonged to the [[House of Windsor|House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha]].
12: ...ild of the couple, was born in Kensington Palace, London on [[24 May]] [[1819]].
20: ...ndants a separate family surname, [[Mountbatten-Windsor]].)
29: ...l of these ladies, whom she regarded as close friends rather than as members of a ceremonial institutio...
37: ...or [[high treason]], but was acquitted on the grounds of insanity. His plea was questioned by many; Oxf... - Anne Neville (4967 bytes)
11: ...rd, Duke of Gloucester, working as a servant in [[London]]. Whatever the truth, it is likely that Richard... - Catherine of Valois (1918 bytes)
7: ...y]]. Catherine died on January 3, [[1437]], in [[London]], and was buried in [[Westminster Abbey]]. Her ... - Diana, Princess of Wales (29391 bytes)
11: ...incess of Wales''' (Diana Frances [[Mountbatten-Windsor]], n饠Spencer) ([[1 July]] [[1961]]–[[31...
34: ...edding took place at [[St Paul's Cathedral]] in [[London]] on [[Wednesday]] [[29 July]] [[1981]] before 3,...
40: ...ncess of Wales spoke to the [[press]] through friends, accusing each other of [[adultery]]. Charles res...
91: ... an [[inquest]] into the death of Diana opened in London held by [[Michael Burgess]], the coroner of [[Eli...
100: ...ly believing the Duke abhorred the idea of his grandsons potentially having [[Muslim]] or half-[[Arab]]... - Elizabeth Woodville (6291 bytes)
10: ...from the public but not from their family and friends) on [[May 1]], [[1464]], at her family home in [[...
16: ...ment in the act ''[[Titulus Regius]]'' on the grounds that Edward had previously promised to marry [[La...
18: ... crown and kept the two princes in the [[Tower of London]], where they had already been lodged to await th...
20: ...rge's Chapel, Windsor|St George's Chapel]] in [[Windsor Castle]].
28: ...eorge's Chapel, Windsor|St George's Chapel]], [[Windsor Castle]] - Margaret of Anjou (3729 bytes)
20: ...was a broken spirit, imprisoned in the [[Tower of London]] until ransomed by the French king. She died on ...
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