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- Puritan (15882 bytes)
4: The word ''Puritan'' is now applied unevenly to a number of [[Protestant]] churche...
5: ...rticular churches or movements, and not by the simple and nebulous term "Puritan."
12: ...cclesiastical courts. They refused to endorse completely all of the ritual directions and formulas of...
26: ...connect between the [[House of Lords]] and the people, rebellion over the attempt to introduce a [[Div...
28: ...en their movement became the status quo; it was replaced by the broader term [[Nonconformist]], which ... - Artemisia Gentileschi (23093 bytes)
3: ...[1653]]) is today considered one of the most accomplished Early [[Baroque]] painters in the generation...
14: ..., had committed incest with his sister-in-law and planned to steal some of Orazio?s paintings. During ...
16: ...12]]-13), stored in the [[Capodimonte Museum of Naples]], is impressive for the violence portrayed, an...
18: ...tist from [[Florence]]. Shortly afterwards the couple moved to [[Florence]], where Artemisia received ...
20: ...urn to [[Rome]] in [[1621]] and later move to [[Naples]]. After her mother's death in [[1651]], Pruden... - Adam and Eve (8913 bytes)
15: ...pters two and three. After his creation, Adam was placed in the Garden of Eden to cultivate it, and to...
19: ... me of the tree, and I did eat" ([[1623]]–[[1625]]).]]
20: ...given eternal life. At the east of the garden God placed [[Cherubim]] and a flaming sword, which turne...
22: ...chpelah]] in [[Hebron]] as the traditional burial place of Adam and Eve.
36: ...nx in the human throat has been called [[Adam's apple]] because of a notion that it was caused by the ... - List of painters (54090 bytes)
1: The following list is an incomplete '''list of painters'''.
60: *[[Sofonisba Anguissola]] ([[1532]]-[[1625]])
211: *[[Jan Brueghel the Elder]] ([[1568]]-[[1625]])
281: *[[John Singleton Copley]] ([[1737]]-[[1815]])
616: *[[Leon Kaplinski]] ([[1826]]-[[1873]]) - Timeline of microscope technology (1673 bytes)
11: * [[1625]] - Giovanni Faber of Bamberg ([[1574]] - [[1629]...
13: ...74]] - [[Anton van Leeuwenhoek]] improves on a simple microscope for viewing biological specimens. - Pirate Ship (44502 bytes)
4: ... any state, in fact piracy has been the first example of universal jurisdiction. Nevertheless today th...
10: ...tances of piracy are the exploits of the [[Sea Peoples]] who threatened the [[Aegean civilization|Aege...
12: ...odecanese]] islet of [[Farmakos|Pharmacusa]].<ref>Plutarch, ''Caesar'' 1-2.</ref> He maintained an att...
16: ...ng some of the most famous ancient pirateering peoples were the [[Illyrians]], populating the western ...
24: ...he sea for their [[hit-and-run tactics]] - a safe place to retreat to if the battle turned against the... - Henry Hudson (4760 bytes)
1: ...d navigator in the early seventeenth century. His place and date of birth are unknown, but [[September...
7: ...e locations (although [[Giovanni da Verrazano]] explored the same coast in [[1524]])–and sailing...
13: ...and spent the next months continuing to map and explore the eastern shores. In November the ship becam...
15: ...e spring of [[1611]], Hudson wanted to continue exploring, but the crew wanted to return home. Eventua...
17: ...West India'') from [[1625]]. The same situation applies to the voyage of [[Adriaen Block]]. - Augusta, Maine (4876 bytes)
1: {{Template:US City infobox|
28: ...nglish settlers from the [[Plymouth Colony]] in [[1625]] as a trading post. Located on the Kennebec Rive...
34: ... to meet in [[Portland, Maine|Portland]] until completion of the new capitol building in [[1832]]. Aug...
43: ...census]]{{GR|2}} of [[2000]], there are 18,560 people, 8,565 households, and 4,607 families residing i...
45: ...living with them, 39.1% are [[Marriage|married couples]] living together, 10.9% have a female househol... - List of astronomers (40322 bytes)
66: ...[[Johann Bayer]] ([[Germany]], [[1572]] – [[1625]])
117: ...ni]] a.k.a. Jean-Dominique Cassini ([[France]], [[1625]] – [[1712]])
318: *[[Johannes Kepler]] ([[Germany]], [[1571]] – [[1630]])
346: *[[Pierre-Simon Laplace]] ([[France]], [[1749]] – [[1827]])
463: *[[Philip Plait]] ([[United States|USA]]) - History of Germany (53864 bytes)
3: While the German people were not fully unified into a single political u...
7: ...he two Germanys in [[1990]]. For further details, please consult the ''main articles'' given at the be...
12: ...mania'', a descriptive work about the Germanic people at the Roman frontier on the Rhine]]
13: Between 800 and 70 BC the Germanic peoples thrust into [[Celts|Celtic]] territory from [[S...
19: ... the whole map of Europe. The Eastern Germanic peoples destroyed the Western Roman Empire, but the sta... - Germany in the Middle Ages (53864 bytes)
3: While the German people were not fully unified into a single political u...
7: ...he two Germanys in [[1990]]. For further details, please consult the ''main articles'' given at the be...
12: ...mania'', a descriptive work about the Germanic people at the Roman frontier on the Rhine]]
13: Between 800 and 70 BC the Germanic peoples thrust into [[Celts|Celtic]] territory from [[S...
19: ... the whole map of Europe. The Eastern Germanic peoples destroyed the Western Roman Empire, but the sta... - Elamite Empire (23098 bytes)
5: Its culture played a crucial role in the [[Achaemenid]] [[Persia...
16: {{Template:Ancient Mesopotamia}}
19: ...]. [[Proto-Elamite]] influence from the [[Persian plateau]] in Susa becomes visible from about [[3200 ...
21: ... area, spread out on the [[Iranian plateau]]; examples of Elamite remains north and east of Iran are [...
60: ...flames rise from the city as Assyrian soldiers topple it with pickaxes and crowbars and carry off the ...
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