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- Industrial Revolution (30001 bytes)
10: ...sh Civil War]] in the [[17th century]]. The [[Inclosure]] movement and the [[British Agricultural Revo...
12: ...ts were split up by local regions, which often imposed tolls and [[tariff]]s on goods traded among the...
14: From about 1100, the population of Europe rose, which is because there was recovery from the di...
16: ...became wealthy from overseas trade. Their social position grew greatly. The manufacturers were ready t...
24: ...eeding produced food with better quality. The Enclosure Movement also made poor farmers go to the town... - Christine de Pizan (6645 bytes)
2: ...''Christine de Pizan''' (circa [[1365]] - circa [[1430]]) was a [[France|French]] [[poet]] and was one o...
5: ...of Orleans]] and attacked the ''[[Romance of the Rose]]'' written by [[Jean de Meung]].
9: ...y. After the king's death in [[1380]] her father lost his appointment, and died soon after; and when C...
11: ...mposed some fifteen important works, chiefly in prose, besides minor pieces.
13: ...0) being received by [[Philip of Burgundy]], at whose desire Christine wrote ''Le Lure des faitz ci bo... - Joan of Arc (27453 bytes)
2: ...[[#Retrial|earlier appeal]] after her death. Her posthumous reception history is a lengthy one: she wa...
7: ...rt of the Duchy of Bar — a part of France whose Duke was pro-Anglo-Burgundian in loyalty. Franc...
14: ...With her piety, confidence, and enthusiasm, she boosted the morale of the troops. The small force she...
18: ...sh army was cut to pieces near [[Patay]], with a loss of 2,200 English soldiers versus only a little o...
24: ...[Paris]], the Royal Court was mesmerized by the prospect of a negotiated peace offered by the Duke of ... - Medieval art (6359 bytes)
1: ...g glory. One of the most famous of the surviving mosaics is in the [[Church of the Holy Wisdom]] in fo...
5: ...rt]]. Medieval art was of many crafts, such as [[mosaic]]s and [[sculpture]]; and there were many uniq...
15: ...an artists adopted the Roman crafts of painting, mosaic, carving and metalwork.
27: ...asters and the re-appropriation of churches to [[mosques]].
29: ... Gothic]] describes Gothic art from about 1360 to 1430. National forms of Gothic developed such as [[Man... - List of painters (54090 bytes)
28: *[[Oswald Achenbach]] ([[1827]]-[[1905]])
37: *[[Josef Albers]] ([[1888]]-[[1976]])
93: *[[Vladimir Baranoff-Rossine]] ([[1888]]-[[1944]])
126: *[[Giovanni Bellini]] (ca.[[1430]]-[[1516]])
158: *[[Ross Bleckner]] ([[1949]]-) - Hundred Years' War (30012 bytes)
1: ... in 1430.PNG|thumb|350px|A map of Europe in the [[1430s]], at the height of the Hundred Years' War]]
3: ...was primarily fought in France, and though in retrospect it has the feeling of a French [[civil war]] ...
5: ...new monarchies. It is often viewed as one of the most significant conflicts in [[medieval warfare]].
10: ...wever, in [[1216]], the Anglo-Normans lost their possessions to France. English nobles in the [[14th c...
17: ...y. Another effect of the war was to galvanize opposition to Edward II among the English lords of Aqui... - Bottlenose Dolphin (16802 bytes)
2: {{Taxobox_begin | color = pink | name = Bottlenose Dolphin}}<br />{{StatusData}}
16: ...enose Dolphin''' (''Tursiops truncatus'') is the most common and well-known [[dolphin]] species. It in...
19: ...e the animals their name of bottlenose. The real nose however is the [[blowhole (bio)|blowhole]] on to...
21: ...a. Those in colder waters also have a fattier composition and blood more suited to deep-diving.
26: ...n KSC04pd0178.jpg|thumb|250px|right|A wild Bottlenose Dolphin playing in the wake of a boat in Florida... - Johann Gutenberg (6119 bytes)
4: ...nting of written materials and an information explosion in [[Renaissance]] Europe.
11: ...claim Dutchman [[Laurens Janszoon Coster|Laurens Coster]] as the first European to invent movable type...
14: ...many, now in France and called Strasbourg) around 1430. Knowing that wood-block type involved a great de...
23: Subscriptions for most of the copies of the Biblia Sacra were probably ...
31: ...ad quickly, and news and books began to travel across Europe far faster than before. It fed the growi... - List of sculptors (9151 bytes)
53: *[[Agostino Carlini]] (1718 - 1790)
60: *[[Cosimo Cenni]]
66: *[[Rossella Cosentino]]
72: *[[Cameron Cross]] (1963- )
83: *[[Alceo Dossena]] (1878 - 1937) - Henry the Navigator (6878 bytes)
3: ...t of [[Ceuta]], on the [[North Africa]]n coast across the [[Straits of Gibraltar]] from the Iberian pe...
5: ...ore and more devoted to Christianity. For the purposes of his interest in exploration, however, the ap...
9: ...e the complicated return voyages, headed upwind, possible; without it, the brothers Ugolino and Guido ...
13: .... Portuguese soon colonized these islands too, in 1430. Portuguese vessels encountered the [[Cape Verde...
15: ...stal explorations, [[Cape Bojador]] remained the most southerly point known to Europeans on the unprom... - List of philosophers (79981 bytes)
1: ... non-philosophers important in the history of philosophy)'', '''listed alphabetically:'''
17: *[[Uriel Acosta]], (1585-1640)
21: *[[Robert Adams (philosopher)|Robert Adams]], (born 1937){{fn|O}}
38: *[[Albert of Saxony (philosopher)|Albert of Saxony]] (c. 1316-1390){{fn|C}}{{...
41: *[[Albinus (philosopher)|Albinus]] (c. 130) - Thutmose III (2569 bytes)
3: '''Thutmose III''' (also written as '''Tuthmosis III'''; called ''Manahpi(r)ya'' in the [[Amarna...
5: ...me sources list his death ranging from 1425 BC to 1430 BC).
7: ...utymes is rendered as Thutmose, Thutmoses or Thutmosis.
9: ==Thutmose's military campaigns==
11: ...tes]] to [[Nubia]]. He was the first Pharaoh to cross the Euphrates, during his campaign against [[Han...
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