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- Steel (28384 bytes)
11: ... As carbon-rich austenite cools, the mixture attempts to revert to the ferrite phase, resulting in an ...
26: ...he first signs of iron use come from [[Ancient Egypt]] and [[Sumer]], where around [[4000 BC]] small i...
32: ...lack of [[nickel]]) appear in [[Anatolia]], [[Egypt]] and [[Mesopotamia]] (see [[Iron#History|Iron: H...
34: ... [[sword]] bearing the name of [[pharaoh]] [[Merneptah]] as well as a [[battle axe]] with an iron blad...
36: ...e remained in widespread use there until after Egypt's conquest by [[Assyria]] in [[663 BC]]. - Melisende of Jerusalem (16880 bytes)
1: ...[Image:Messalinde-Jerusalem.JPG|frame|A queen accepting fealty from a vassal, possibly Melisende herse...
3: '''Melisende''' ([[1105]] - [[September 11]], [[1161]]) was [[Kingdom of Jerusalem|Q...
21: ...oon thereafter an unsuccessful assassination attempt against Hugh was attributed to Fulk or his suppor...
23: ...ce. William of Tyre wrote that Fulk "did not attempt to take the initiative, even in trivial matters, ...
31: ...culty, undertake a commission for a royal manuscript ''de grand luxe''". Melisende must be given credi... - Agnes of Courtenay (6051 bytes)
3: ...affa and Ascalon]], in [[1157]], after Hugh was captured in battle by the Muslims. The marriage was op...
11: ... to have her brother Joscelin III released from captivity and appointed [[Officers of the Kingdom of J... - Hildegard of Bingen (14070 bytes)
3: ... Bingen''' ([[September 16]] [[1098]] – [[September 17]], [[1179]]) was a [[German people|German...
12: ...e heavens were opened and a blinding light of exceptional brilliance flowed through my entire brain. A...
20: [[Image:Sthildegard-manuscript.jpg|thumb|"Universal Man" illumination from Hilde...
22: ...ons of words for her lyrics and a constructed script, many [[conlang]]ers look upon her as a mediaeval...
24: ...rd also authored ''Physica and Causae et Curae'' (1150), both works on natural history and curative powe... - Medieval art (6359 bytes)
5: ...was of many crafts, such as [[mosaic]]s and [[sculpture]]; and there were many unique genres of art, s...
15: ...the East. During this period Christian artists adopted the Roman crafts of painting, mosaic, carving a...
25: ...e variety of crafts including illustrated manuscripts, textiles, ceramics, metalwork and glass. There ...
29: ...tyle. [[Gothic sculpture]] was born in France in 1150 and spread throughout Europe, by the 13th century...
40: ***[[Sculpture]] - Blast furnace (4721 bytes)
4: ...t in [[Sweden]] at Lapphyttan, sometime between [[1150]] and [[1350]]. It is unclear whether the blast ...
9: ... opened to allow the slag to pour out, and once emptied, another valve at the bottom opened to remove ... - Medieval music (31843 bytes)
17: ...nces over previous practice, most of them in conception and notation of rhythm. The most famous music ...
19: ... The first definitely identifiable scholar to accept and explain the mensural system was Johannes de M...
23: == Early Medieval music ( -1150)==
27: ...nd and this music was later suppressed in an attempt to enforce conformity on the entire liturgy. In M...
36: ...prising similarity of mode, shape and phrase conception to later western music. - Castle (27805 bytes)
48: A description of this earlier castle is given in the life of...
52: ...nd a natural rock stronghold which only needed adaptation, as at Clifford, Ludlow, the Peak and Exeter...
59: ...on penetrated to Europe, and Alnwick Castle (1140-1150) shows the influence of the new system.
63: ...e), entailed the fall of the whole castle. The adoption of the concentric system precluded any such mi...
65: The general adoption of [[cannon]] placed in the hands of the centr... - Phoenix, Arizona (34271 bytes)
2: ...[Image:Phxdowntown.jpg|thumb|right|475px|Phoenix Uptown (northern skyline) in 2004, looking north ]]
61: The first public school in Phoenix opened on [[September 5]], [[1872]], in the courtroom of the count...
99: ...t is typical to see the riverbed entirely dry except when unexpected runoff forces the release of wate...
107: ... June through early September. In every year except 1911, the temperature has soared to 110 °F (4...
111: ...mmon during the monsoon season from July to mid-September as humid air surges in from the [[Gulf of Ca... - Des Moines, Iowa (13222 bytes)
4: ...tate]] of [[Iowa]], which was incorporated on [[September 22]], [[1851]] as Fort Des Moines.
43: ...l retained its individual government but had the option to join the consolidated government at any tim...
97: *[http://www.kwky.com/welcome.htm KWKY] 1150, christian talk, music
157: ...aughey septuplets]], the first surviving set of septuplets, were born in Des Moines to a couple from n... - List of philosophers (79981 bytes)
12: *[[Abhinavagupta]] (fl. c. 975 - 1025){{fn|R}}
32: *[[Agrippa the Sceptic]], (1st/2nd century){{fn|R}}
967: *[[Jean-Baptiste Lamarck]], (1744-1829){{fn|O}}
1304: *[[Ptolemy]], (c. 85-c. 165){{fn|R}}
1551: *[[Thierry of Chartres]], (fl. c. 1130-1150){{fn|R}} - Olmec (8916 bytes)
6: ...cans to develop a [[hieroglyph]]ic [[alphabet|script]] for their language, the earliest known example ...
14: ...distinctively Olmec features begin to emerge at c.1150 BCE. The rise of [[civilization]] here was probab...
23: ...ed such high temperatures is that of [[Ancient Egypt]] ([http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m10...
36: ...a shell [[glyph]]) several [[centuries]] before [[Ptolemy]] (possibly by the [[fourth century BC]]) wh...
53: ...ih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=11144288 PubMed], Department o... - Sumer (14409 bytes)
2: ...Sumerian pre-[[Cuneiform (script)|cuneiform]] script may precede any other form of writing, and dates ...
21: ...ere in turn defeated by the [[Elamites]] around [[1150 BC]].
26: ...on the canals, although the rich were able to exempt themselves.
49: ...several seals inscribed with the Indus Valley script suggest a remarkably wide-ranging network of anci...
90: ...known languages. There have been many failed attempts to connect Sumerian to other languages, especial... - Ashkelon (5935 bytes)
1: ...There are about 105,000 citizens in the city ([[September]] [[2003]]), which was formed out of the Ara...
14: ...nes conquered Canaanite Ashkelon about [[1150s BC|1150 BCE]]. Their earliest pottery is similar to potte...
18: ...t was fortified with fifty-three towers by its Egyptian Fatimid rulers, to defend it against marauding... - Erbium (9509 bytes)
100: | 1150 kJ/mol
122: | [[electron capture|ε]]
180: ...ndard temperature and pressure|STP]] are used except where noted.</font>
185: ...d the element gives a characteristic sharp [[absorption spectra]] in [[visible light]], [[ultraviolet]...
203: ... abundant stable isotope, Er-166, is [[electron capture]], and the primary mode after is [[beta decay]... - Iron (23778 bytes)
100: <td>2.73 y </td><td>ε capture</td>
129: ...ndard temperature and pressure|STP]] are used except where noted.</font></th>
147: ...ulfur and phosphorus, have been reduced to an acceptable level. It has a melting point in the range o...
154: ... of iron come from the [[Sumerian]]s and the [[Egypt]]ians, where around 4000 BC, small items, such as...
156: ...appear in [[Mesopotamia]], [[Anatolia]], and [[Egypt]]. However, their use appears to be ceremonial, a... - Silicon (13233 bytes)
47: ...s and dilute [[alkali]]s, but most [[acid]]s (except for a combination of [[nitric acid]] and [[hydrof...
78: ...ever, provided the amount of SiO<sub>2</sub> is kept high, silicon carbide may be eliminated, as expla...
95: ...ty silicon rods are exposed to trichlorosilane at 1150 °C. The trichlorosilane gas decomposes and d... - History of science in the Middle Ages (30877 bytes)
4: ...y compilations and summaries that were often corrupted in the process of copying and [[translation|tra...
6: ...rs. These advances, however, were suddenly interrupted by the [[Black Plague]] and are virtually unkno...
18: In the end of the [[8th century]] the first attempt at rebuilding Western culture occurred. [[Charlem...
29: ...ll the intellectually crucial ancient authors except [[Thucydides]]. During the thirteenth century the...
37: ... and Grosseteste conducted investigations into [[optics]], although much of it was similar to what was... - Elamite Empire (23098 bytes)
10: ... later capital, [[Susa]], and geographers after [[Ptolemy]] called it ''Susiana''. Though primarily ce...
13: ...uch links are at best conjectural, as [[Indus script|Harappan pictographs]] have yet to be deciphered....
17: ...sel, Proto-Elamite period; 3100?2900 BCE, Iran, kept at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.]]
19: ...and texts in the undeciphered [[Proto-Elamite script]] continue to be present until ca. [[2700 BC]]. T...
24: ...e: ca. 3200 BC – 2700 BC (Proto-Elamite script in Susa)
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