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- Mexico (27255 bytes)
66: ... defeat of the Mexica in [[1521]], marked the beginning of the 300 year-long colonial period of Mexico...
74: ...o again recognize Mexican [[sovereignty]], Santa Anna's army turned to the northern rebellion. The inh...
80: ...tate governorship]], an event that marked the beginning of the party's loss of hegemony. Through the e...
201: ...igrants that founded the city of [[Chipilo]] in [[1882]] came from the [[Veneto]] region in northern [[I...
206: ...nities. In [[2005]] this system included 30,000 connected schools, 3 million students and 300,000 teac... - List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
37: ...rew]], (1736-1797), U.S. poloitical leader from Connecticut
49: ...ams, Gerry]], (born 1948), Irish politician & [[Sinn F驮]] leader
69: ...hitect)|Adams, Thomas]], (1871-1940), UK urban planner
85: *[[Cannonball Adderley|Adderley, Cannonball]], (1928-1975), saxophonist
104: *[[David Adler|Adler, David]], (1882-1949), architect - Victoria of the United Kingdom (38571 bytes)
14: ... Victoria, from birth she was formally [[Style (manner of address)|styled]] ''Her Royal Highness Princ...
33: ...ria appears on the widely circulated [[1841]] [[Penny Red]] postage stamp.]]
46: ...was removed from office; he had on that occasion announced the British government's approval for Presi...
48: ...ge, Pate struck her with his cane, crushing her bonnet and bruising her. Pate was later tried; he fail...
57: ...een's visit to form a new political movement, [[Sinn Fein]]. - Mary of Teck (14662 bytes)
11: ...f Teck was however granted a [[Parliament]]ary [[Annuity]] of [[UKP|?]]4000 plus ?4000 from her mother...
29: ...ascelles, 6th Earl of Harewood ([[9 September]] [[1882]] – [[23 May]] [[1947]]); and had issue.
40: ...lbert was found to be abusing the children. The nanny would pinch Edward before he was to be presented...
58: The beginning of Mary's reign as Queen Consort saw her come ...
62: ...e mother. She failed to notice the neglect of a nanny of the young Princes Edward and Albert, and her ... - Rosa Luxemburg (23905 bytes)
8: ...m [[1886]]. The Proletariat had been founded in [[1882]], twenty years before the Russian workers' parti...
12: ...marck]]'s laws against [[social democracy]] were annulled and the [[Social Democratic Party of Germany...
34: ... others such as [[Clara Zetkin]] and [[Franz Erdmann Mehring|Franz Mehring]], Luxemburg created the ''...
45: ...ferent moments of the same process, so that one cannot exist without the other. These theoretical ins...
71: ...h this feat — as always in large historic connections — the particular mistakes and errors... - Emmeline Pankhurst (1950 bytes)
5: ...]]. Its members included the notorious [[Annie Kenney]], the suffragette "martyr", [[Emily Davison]] ... - Sylvia Pankhurst (3170 bytes)
3: '''(Estelle) Sylvia Pankhurst''' ([[May 5]], [[1882]] - [[September 27]], [[1960]]) was a campaigner ...
15: ...mmunists such as [[Amadeo Bordiga]] and [[Anton Pannekoek]]. - Mary Cassatt (9047 bytes)
4: ...nsylvania]], which is now part of [[Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania|Pittsburgh]], she was the daughter of a w...
6: ...a Academy of the Fine Arts]] in [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania]] (1861-1865). Tired of patronizing instr...
18: ...moving to Paris in [[1877]]. Her sister died in [[1882]], but her mother regained her health, and Cassat...
37: ...exander J. Cassatt]] was the president of the [[Pennsylvania Railroad]] from [[1899]] until his death ...
57: ... Mary Woman in Black 1882.jpg|''Woman in Black'' (1882) - Ouida (1938 bytes)
9: * ''Bimbi, Stories for Children'' (1882)
20: * ''In Maremma'' (1882) - Christine de Pizan (6645 bytes)
4: When she was 24 her husband ɴienne du Castel died, and Pizan became a court writer ...
9: ...nce|Charles V]]. At fifteen Christine married ɴienne du Castel, who became Charles's notary and secre...
13: ...e Christine wrote ''Le Lure des faitz ci bonnes manneurs du sayge roy Charles'' (1405), valuable as a ...
25: ...massy (Paris, 1838); E.M.D. Robineau (Saint-Omer, 1882); and Friedrich Koch (Goslar, 1885). It is possib... - Virginia Woolf (9482 bytes)
3: '''Virginia Woolf''' ([[January 25]], [[1882]] – [[March 28]], [[1941]]) was a [[United ...
11: Woolf is considered one of the greatest innovators in the English language. In her works she ...
13: ..., devised to disclose workings of protagonists's inner minds- but, as far as the revealed psychic cont...
22: ...ed from [[Michael Cunningham]]'s Pulitzer Prize-winning [[1998]] novel of the same name. ''The Hours'... - Emmy Noether (2715 bytes)
1: '''Emmy Noether''' ([[March 23]] [[1882]] – [[April 14]] [[1935]]) was one of the m... - Florence Nightingale (15657 bytes)
3: ...national Nurses Day]] is celebrated on her birth anniversary.
7: Born into a wealthy and well-connected [[Britain|British]] family at the 'Villa Col...
9: ...re for the legions of the poor and indigent. She announced her decision to her family in [[1845]], evo...
25: ...il October [[1854]]. Her father had given her an annual income of [[Pound Sterling|?]]500 (roughly $50...
63: By [[1882]] Nightingale nurses had a growing influential pr... - Jennie Kidd Trout (1706 bytes)
1: '''Jennie Kidd Trout''' ([[April 21]], [[1841]] – [...
3: ...nd]], Jennie (whose name is variously spelled '"Jenny'") moved with her parents to Canada in [[1847]],...
5: ...ferring to the [[Women's Medical College]] in [[Pennsylvania]], where she earned her M.D. on [[March 1...
9: Due to poor health, Trout retired in 1882 to [[Palma Sola, Florida|Palma Sola]], [[Florida]... - Clara Schumann (3372 bytes)
1: [[Image:clara_s.jpg|right|thumb|Clara Schumann]]
3: ...20]], [[1896]]), wife of composer [[Robert Schumann]], was one of the leading [[pianist]]s of the [[R...
7: ...t, and Beethoven as well as those of Robert Schumann and Brahms.
9: ...ally, with the exception of four seasons, until [[1882]]; and from [[1885]] to [[1888]] she appeared eac...
13: ==Music of Clara Schumann== - Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (8386 bytes)
15: ...imed that all religions were both true, in their inner teachings, and false or imperfect, in their ext...
17: By [[1882]] the Theosophical Society became an internationa...
23: ...d of the Theosophical Society, by her protege, [[Annie Besant]]. - Sarah Bernhardt (3531 bytes)
10: ...es Damala (aka [[Jacques Damala]]) in London in [[1882]], but the marriage, which legally endured until ... - Grace Kelly (6610 bytes)
3: ...f [[Monaco]]''', was an [[Academy Award|Oscar]]-winning [[United States|American]] film [[actor|actres...
5: ...er was a self-made millionaire and a gold-medal-winning [[Olympic Games|Olympic]] [[Sport rowing|scull...
9: ...t Supporting Actress]], but the award went to [[Donna Reed]] for her role in ''[[From Here to Eternity...
13: ...rred in the role of a princess, alongside Alec Guinness and Louis Jourdan.]]
17: ...hat [[Monaco]] would revert to France since, in [[1882]], a childless prince of Monaco adopted an unrela... - Chromosome (12667 bytes)
2: ... described in detail by [[Walther Flemming]] in [[1882]]. In [[1910]], [[Thomas Hunt Morgan]] proved tha... - Ponce De Leon (5480 bytes)
11: ...ew York]] in 1882 using the bronze from English Cannons seized after the English attacked San Juan in ...
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