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- Mexico (27255 bytes)
64: Latecomers to Mexico's central plateau, the Mexica, or Aztecs, as they were sometim...
76: ...ublic, the [[Zapotec]] [[Benito Juárez]], with diplomatic and logistical support from the United Stat...
87: ...the Congress. [[Congress of Mexico|Congress]] has played an increasingly important role since [[1997]]...
163: ...[Yucatᮝ]. The center of Mexico is a great, high plateau, open to the north, with mountain chains on ...
174: ...ding driver of growth, accompanied by increased employment and higher wages. Mexico still needs to ove... - List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
1: {{List of people A}}
14: ==== People named Adam ====
32: ===== People named Adams =====
61: *[[Michael Adams|Adams, Michael]], (1971-), chess player
69: ...architect)|Adams, Thomas]], (1871-1940), UK urban planner - Victoria of the United Kingdom (38571 bytes)
12: ...f Leiningen]]. Victoria, the only child of the couple, was born in Kensington Palace, London on [[24 M...
18: ...tch, but his objections failed to dissuade the couple. Many scholars have suggested that Prince Albert...
20: ...merged the Royal House name and family surname, replacing both with one deliberately English sounding ...
29: ...wives of Whigs, but Sir Robert Peel expected to replace them with wives of Tories. Victoria strongly o...
37: ... the assassination attempt; others attributed the plot to supporters of the heir-presumptive, the King... - Mary of Teck (14662 bytes)
11: ... a [[Parliament]]ary [[Annuity]] of [[UKP|?]]4000 plus ?4000 from her mother, the Duchess of Cambridge...
19: ...an arranged marriage, May and George soon were deeply in love. George never took a mistress and wrote ...
21: ...], [[St. James's Palace]], in [[London]]. The couple had six children in total, listed below.
29: ...ascelles, 6th Earl of Harewood ([[9 September]] [[1882]] – [[23 May]] [[1947]]); and had issue.
38: ...ty, but was a favourite of George, who liked a simple life. - Rosa Luxemburg (23905 bytes)
8: ...m [[1886]]. The Proletariat had been founded in [[1882]], twenty years before the Russian workers' parti...
14: ...ontrary, stuck to her revolutionary Marxist principles. In [[1893]], along with [[Leo Jogiches]] and [...
19: ... Revisionists to leave the SPD. This did not take place, but at least [[Karl Kautsky]]'s party leaders...
21: ...he party leadership refused, and in [[1910]] she split off from Kautsky.
32: ...l catastrophe which even led her to briefly contemplate suicide: [[Revisionism]], which she had fought... - Emmeline Pankhurst (1950 bytes)
5: ...Married Women's Property Act]]s of [[1870]] and [[1882]]. In [[1889]], Mrs Pankhurst founded the [[Wome...
7: ...n did not endear her to everyone, and there were splits within the movement as a result. Her autobiog... - Sylvia Pankhurst (3170 bytes)
3: '''(Estelle) Sylvia Pankhurst''' ([[May 5]], [[1882]] - [[September 27]], [[1960]]) was a campaigner ... - Mary Cassatt (9047 bytes)
8: ... paid only for her basic needs but not her art supplies. She returned to Europe in [[1871]] when the a...
18: ...moving to Paris in [[1877]]. Her sister died in [[1882]], but her mother regained her health, and Cassat...
21: ...ed, and she moved away from impressionism to a simpler, straightforward approach. By [[1886]], she no ...
57: ... Mary Woman in Black 1882.jpg|''Woman in Black'' (1882)
77: ...y Children Playing with a Cat 1908.jpg|''Children Playing with a Cat'' (1908) - Ouida (1938 bytes)
9: * ''Bimbi, Stories for Children'' (1882)
20: * ''In Maremma'' (1882)
37: * http://www.indiana.edu/cgi-bin-ip/letrs/vwwplib.pl - This site contains some of Ouida's works. - Christine de Pizan (6645 bytes)
4: ...du Castel died, and Pizan became a court writer employed by various ducal and Royal households, in ord...
21: ...fe in the France of the early 15th century not supplied by more formal historians.
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 ...
7: ...he [[Bloomsbury group]]. While nowhere near a simple recapitulation of the coterie's ideals, Woolf's ...
9: ...[[1905]], initially for the ''[[Times Literary Supplement]]''. In [[1912]] she married [[Leonard Woolf...
13: ...e atmosphere closer to the prose poem than to the plot-centred novel. Her last and most ambitious work... - Emmy Noether (2715 bytes)
1: '''Emmy Noether''' ([[March 23]] [[1882]] – [[April 14]] [[1935]]) was one of the m... - Florence Nightingale (15657 bytes)
7: ...d [[Parthenope]] for the old city that is now [[Naples]]). A brilliant and strong-willed woman, Floren...
23: ...mily objections concerning the risks and social implications of such activity, and the [[Roman Cathol...
31: ...cial indifference. [[Medicine]]s were in short supply, [[hygiene]] was being neglected, and mass [[inf...
35: ...ted to have escaped serious injury when it was toppled in an accident. Following this episode she used...
47: ...statistical reports and was instrumental in the implementation of its recommendations. - Jennie Kidd Trout (1706 bytes)
1: ... medicine until [[1880]], when [[Emily Stowe]] completed the official qualifications.
9: Due to poor health, Trout retired in 1882 to [[Palma Sola, Florida|Palma Sola]], [[Florida]... - Clara Schumann (3372 bytes)
7: ... [[Johannes Brahms]], at age twenty, met the couple in [[1853]] and his friendship with Clara lasted...
9: ...ally, with the exception of four seasons, until [[1882]]; and from [[1885]] to [[1888]] she appeared eac...
11: ...oachim, as one of the first executants who really played like composers. Besides being remembered for...
14: ... Germany who declared them a "marvelous, heavenly pleasure." - Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (8386 bytes)
7: ...mb), which closed after dissatisfied customers complained of fraudulent activities.
9: ...she emigrated to [[New York City]]. Impressing people with her apparent [[psychic]] abilities she was ...
17: By [[1882]] the Theosophical Society became an internationa...
21: ...sm]], [[Bright's disease]] of the kidneys, and complications from [[influenza]], Madame Helena Petrovn... - Sarah Bernhardt (3531 bytes)
8: ...]]. She was also to publish a series of books and plays throughout her life.
10: ...es Damala (aka [[Jacques Damala]]) in London in [[1882]], but the marriage, which legally endured until ... - Grace Kelly (6610 bytes)
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...
5: ...pecial structures called ''[[telomere]]s''. DNA replication begins at many different locations on the ...
8: ...omosomes initiate replication and one origin of replication.
19: ...romosomes are highly structured (Fig. 2). For example, genes with similar functions are often kept clo...
23: ...>'''Table 1:''' Examples of chromosome numbers (diploid).</caption> - Ponce De Leon (5480 bytes)
7: ...o serve Diego, Ponce de León obtained title to explore the areas north of [[Cuba]].
11: ...to Rico]]. The statue was made in [[New York]] in 1882 using the bronze from English Cannons seized afte...
14: ... Leon is buried|200px|right|Ponce de Leon resting place]]
18: ... horses and other domestic animals, and farming implements. The expedition landed on the southwest coa...
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