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  1. Mary I of Scotland (27810 bytes)
    12: She was born at [[Linlithgow Palace]], West Lothian, [[Scotland]], on [[...
    14: ...tionable. Females and female lines could inherit only after extinction of male lines.
    36: This seemed to Marie to be the only sensible solution to her troubles. In February [...
    44: ...1|Act of Settlement]] would not be passed until [[1701]], the will of Henry VIII had excluded the Stuart...
    49: ...eith]] on [[August 19]], [[1561]]. She was still only 18 and, despite her talents, her upbringing had ...
  2. Anne of Great Britain (22303 bytes)
    15: ...r was the future Mary II. Anne and Mary were the only children of the Duke and Duchess of York to surv...
    26: ...Crown, Parliament enacted the [[Act of Settlement 1701]], which provided that, failing the issue of Prin...
    28: ...re mourning dress when her father died later in [[1701]]. She did not, however, endear herself to her ha...
    35: ...1st Baron Godolphin]]. The Whigs—who were, unlike the Tories, vigorous supporters of the War of ...
    38: ...right to own property in England into jeopardy), unless Scotland either repealed the Act of Security o...
  3. Mary II of England (12093 bytes)
    11: ...visor. Although her parents bore eight children, only Mary and her younger sister [[Anne of Great Brit...
    20: ...ard]]—in June [[1688]], for the son would, unlike Mary and Anne, be raised a Roman Catholic. Som...
    24: ...e the title of King. But Philip II remained King only during his wife's lifetime, and restrictions wer...
    26: ...the sole and full exercise of the regal power be only in and executed by the said Prince of Orange in ...
    38: ... deemed necessary to pass the [[Act of Settlement 1701]], which provided that the Crown would go to the ...
  4. United Kingdom (37269 bytes)
    64: ...ch includes the mainland of Great Britain, the mainland of [[Ireland]], and the smaller islands associ...
    91: ...use of Commons|House of Commons]], the lower and only directly elected house in Britain's [[bicameral]...
    93: ...he Commons with a small number chosen from the mainly appointed upper house, the [[British House of Lo...
    97: ...e modern United Kingdom, the monarch's role is mainly, though not exclusively, ceremonial. Her Majesty...
    105: ...y a Roman [[Catholic]] by the [[Act of Settlement 1701|Act of Settlement]].
  5. Timeline of invention (28171 bytes)
    110: * [[1510]]: [[Pocket watch]]: [[Peter Henlein]]
    128: * [[1701]]: [[Seed drill]]: [[Jethro Tull (agriculturist)|...
    311: ...ormer]]: [[William Stanley (physicist)|William Stanley]]
    321: ... [[1888]]: [[Pneumatic tube tire]]: [[John Boyd Dunlop]]
    394: * [[1914]]: [[Tank]], military: [[Ernest Dunlop Swinton]]
  6. Isaac Newton (23339 bytes)
    4: ...[orbit]]s (such as those of [[comet]]s) were not only [[ellipse|elliptic]], but could also be [[hyperb...
    36: ... primarily to the wider diameter of the mirror. (Only later, as glasses with a variety of refractive p...
    73: ...om [[1689]] to [[1690]] and in [[1701]], but his only recorded comments were to complain about a cold ...
    75: ...eiters. He retired from his Cambridge duties in [[1701]]. Ironically, it was his work at the Mint, rathe...
    77: In [[1701]] Newton anonymously published a law of thermodyn...
  7. Michigan (29427 bytes)
    40: ...ed by French voyageurs in the 17th century. In [[1701]], explorer [[Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac]] foun...
    46: ...al transportation. It was a development that not only transformed Detroit and Michigan, but permanentl...
    57: *[[1701]] [[Antoine de Lamothe Cadillac]], with his lieut...
    92: ...similar legal and political systems, so maybe we only need to mention anything that makes the state di...
    102: ... the referendum. The power of initiative extends only to laws which the legislature may enact under th...
  8. Bottlenose Dolphin (16802 bytes)
    33: The species is commonly known for its friendly character and curiosity. ...
    40: Their diet consists mainly of small fish, occasionally also [[squid]], [[cr...
    52: ...almost exclusively shown by females. This is the only known case of tool use in marine mammals. An ela...
    57: ...t and is inserted into the vagina. The act lasts only 10-30 seconds, but is repeated numerous times, w...
    88: ...much easier to spot than the tuna, fishermen commonly encircle dolphins to catch tuna, sometimes resul...
  9. Blackbeard (5955 bytes)
    2: ...d to have run ashore near what is now Beaufort's Inlet, North Carolina in 1718.
    6: ...] during the [[War of the Spanish Succession]] ([[1701]]-[[1713]]), and later served aboard a Jamaican s...
    18: ...At first, Blackbeard's superior knowledge of the inlet allowed him to maneuver freely while the Englis...
  10. William Dampier (7308 bytes)
    20: ... an [[East Indiaman]] and returned home in August 1701.
    28: He wrote an account of the 1699–1701 expedition, ''A Voyage to New Holland'' and retur...
  11. William Kidd (4938 bytes)
    2: ...m "Captain" Kidd''' ([[1645]]–[[May 23]], [[1701]]) is often remembered as a notorious [[pirate]],...
    6: ... least a French passenger aboard. Legally he was only allowed to take [[France|French]] and pirate ves...
    10: ... pretended to be French. Kidd took his prize and only later realised that he had in fact captured an E...
    12: ...and joined the pirates of the ''Mocha Frigate''. Only 13 of Kidd’s men remained loyal to him.
    16: ...arges and was [[hanging|hanged]] on [[May 23]], [[1701]] in [[London]]. His body was left to hang in an ...
  12. Benjamin Franklin (22881 bytes)
    17: ...uly 9]], [[1699]]), Ebenezer ([[September 20]], [[1701]]), Thomas ([[December 7]], [[1703]]), '''Benjami...
    25: ...as "A penny saved is a penny earned" are now commonly quoted every day by people all over the world.
    27: ...ranklin felt that this [[enlightenment (concept)|enlightenment]] partly contributed to the American co...
    42: ...'' is not ''created'' by rubbing substances, but only ''transferred'', so that "''the total quantity i...
    52: ...hat Franklin was involved in the creation of not only the aforementioned first volunteer fire departme...
  13. List of mathematicians (37424 bytes)
    17: *[[Lars Ahlfors|Lars Valerian Ahlfors]] (Finland, [[1907]] - [[1996]])
    232: *[[William Emerson]] (England/United Kingdom, [[1701]] - [[1782]])
    443: *[[Ernst Leonard Lindel? (Finland, [[1870]] - [[1946]])
    528: *[[Rolf Nevanlinna]] (Finland, [[1895]] - [[1980]])
    555: *[[Paul Painlev靝 (France, [[1863]] - [[1933]])
  14. List of astronomers (40322 bytes)
    120: *[[Anders Celsius]], ([[1701]] – [[1744]])
    437: *[[Liisi Oterma]] ([[Finland]], [[1915]] – [[2001]])
    465: *[[John Stanley Plaskett]] ([[Canada]], [[1865]] – [[1941...
    523: *[[Frederick Hanley Seares]] ([[United States|USA]], [[1873]] &ndas...
    598: *[[Yrj?is䬤]] ([[Finland]], [[1891]] – [[1971]])
  15. July 24 (8660 bytes)
    6: *[[1701]] - [[Detroit, Michigan]] founded.
    31: ...ria|Prime Minister of Bulgaria]], and became the only [[monarch]] in history to regain [[political pow...
    63: *[[1940]] - [[Stanley Hauerwas]], Christian theologian
  16. Celsius (3635 bytes)
    18: ...fter the Swedish astronomer [[Anders Celsius]] ([[1701]]–[[1744]]), who first proposed a similar s...
    26: ... by the government and the media. It is also the only scale used in British cooking and temperature co...
  17. History of Germany (53864 bytes)
    50: ...-people and the Teutonic Order, moved into the thinly populated Slav territories east of the Oder ([[B...
    102: In 1701 [[Frederick I of Prussia|Elector Frederick of Bra...
    110: ... the nobility and citizenry, an "[[enlightenment|enlightened]] [[absolutism]]" was established in Prus...
    151: ...ssia and [[Denmark]] over [[Schleswig]], which - unlike [[Holstein]] - was not part of the German Conf...
    196: In 1888 Kaiser Wilhelm I died, followed only 99 days later by his son [[Friedrich III, German...
  18. Germany in the Middle Ages (53864 bytes)
    50: ...-people and the Teutonic Order, moved into the thinly populated Slav territories east of the Oder ([[B...
    102: In 1701 [[Frederick I of Prussia|Elector Frederick of Bra...
    110: ... the nobility and citizenry, an "[[enlightenment|enlightened]] [[absolutism]]" was established in Prus...
    151: ...ssia and [[Denmark]] over [[Schleswig]], which - unlike [[Holstein]] - was not part of the German Conf...
    196: In 1888 Kaiser Wilhelm I died, followed only 99 days later by his son [[Friedrich III, German...
  19. 18th century (8231 bytes)
    3: ...'''' refers to the [[century]] that lasted from [[1701]] through [[1800]] in the [[Gregorian calendar]].
    9: ...gin to shake the old ways and feudal life. [[The Enlightenment]] was in full bloom and threatened the ...
    11: ...[Vienna]] where nations could boast their power, enlightenment, and impression to the rest of Europe. ...
    16: * [[1701]]-[[1714|14]]: [[War of the Spanish Succession]]
    28: * [[1735]]-[[1799|99]]: The [[Qianlong Emperor]] of China oversees a huge expansion i...
  20. 18th century new (49640 bytes)
    2: The '''18th century''' lasted from [[1701]] to [[1800]] in the [[Gregorian calendar]], in a...
    6: ...90s. At first, the monarchies of Europe embraced enlightenment ideals, but with the French revolution,...
    18: ...ession.html |title=War of the Spanish Succession, 1701-1714 |publisher=Historyofwar.org |date= |accessda...
    19: * [[1701]]-[[1702]]: The ''[[Daily Courant]]'' and the ''T...
    45: ...killed by [[Robert Maynard]] in a North Carolina inlet on the inner side of [[Ocracoke Island]]

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