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  1. Jacques Cartier (8139 bytes)
    7: ...st familiar portrait (see right) was painted by a Russian artist in 1839 for the city of Saint-Malo.
    15: ==Second Voyage 1535-1536==
    17: ...]] ([[Montreal]]) and arrived on [[October 2]], [[1535]]. Much more impressive than the small and squal...
    19: ...actly when Cartier decided to spend the winter of 1535-1536 in Canada but the decision must have been ma...
    23: ... the Hurons and then among the French. By mid-February, Cartier states that "out of 110 that we were,...
  2. Mary, the mother of Jesus (30135 bytes)
    8: ... she died between three and 15 years after the [[crucifixion]] of Jesus, can be found in the [[Apocryp...
    15: ...history of Jesus is recorded: his going up to [[Jerusalem]] when twelve years of age, where he was fou...
    27: ...ived. They took her to live in the [[Temple in Jerusalem]] when she was three years old, much like Ha...
    31: ...nto [[Heaven]]. ("[[Mary's Tomb]]" - a tomb in Jerusalem is attributed to Mary, but it was unknown un...
    40: ...jpg|thumb|140px|Right|Image from 17th century [[Peru]]vian [[cult]]]]
  3. Vermont (39851 bytes)
    38: ...for its scenery, [[dairy]] products and [[maple syrup]], Vermont has long been known for its [[Liberal...
    46: ...[tree-line|timberline]], form a north-south spine running the most of the length of the state, slightl...
    50: ...rs. The northern part of the state, including the rural northeastern section (dubbed the "[[Northeast ...
    60: ...ermont is thought to be [[Jacques Cartier]], in [[1535]]. On [[July 30]], [[1609]], [[French colonizatio...
    66: In [[1731]], the French arrived. Here they constructed a small temporary wooden stockade (Fort de Pi...
  4. History of California (38344 bytes)
    5: ...nd of opportunity and wealth, first with the Gold Rush of 1849, then with its fertile agricultural lan...
    21: ...Cortés accompanied expeditions in [[1534]] and [[1535]] without finding the sought-after city.
    23: On [[May 3]], [[1535]], Cortés claimed "Santa Cruz Island" (now known as the peninsula of [[Baja Ca...
    45: ...l flags to fly over California: that of England, Russia, Spain, Mexico, the Republic of California, a...
    55: ...]]. He found good ports with rich pearl beds and fruitful islands, and re-established the city of [[La...
  5. Thomas More (15893 bytes)
    2: ...''' ([[7 February]], [[1478]]–[[6 July]], [[1535]]), posthumously known also as '''Saint Thomas Mo...
    36: ...n]], a lady of the court. In [[1527]], Henry instructed Cardinal Wolsey to petition [[Pope Clement VI...
    44: ... was able to produce a letter in which he had instructed Barton not to interfere with state matters.
    48: On [[1 July]] [[1535]], More was tried before a panel of judges that i...
    53: ...ld on to his religious convictions in the face of ruin and death, and the dignity with which he conduc...
  6. Protestant Reformation (26890 bytes)
    20: ...zing the population to the financial and moral corruption of the secular [[Renaissance]] church.
    28: The frustrated reformism of the humanists, ushered in by ...
    30: ...ot be limited. God was now an unknowable absolute ruler, and religion would be more fervent and emotio...
    32: ...eval zenith of the church. [[Erasmus]] held that true religion was a matter of inward devotion rather ...
    34: ...North burghers and monarchs were united in their frustration for not paying any [[tax|taxes]] to the n...
  7. Gerardus Mercator (3294 bytes)
    9: ... copper engraving of maps. He wrote the first instruction book of italic script to be published in nor...
    14: [[Image:Mercator World Map.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Rumold's world map, drawn in [[1587]] after his fath...
    15: ...ublished in [[1595]] after his death by his son [[Rumold Mercator]].
  8. Erasmus (18332 bytes)
    8: ...mly in any one of these. His time in England was fruitful in the making of lifelong friendships with t...
    14: ...tangling obligations; yet he was in a singularly true sense the center of the literary movement of his...
    16: ...hree other editions - in [[1522]], [[1527]] and [[1535]].
    23: ...ith was the [[free will|freedom of the will]], a crucial point. In his ''De libero arbitrio diatribe ...
    25: ...he egg that Luther hatched" he half admitted the truth of the charge, but said he had expected quite a...
  9. Francis Drake (14963 bytes)
    7: ...f his birth is unknown and could be as early as [[1535]]. The [[1540]] date is taken from a portrait pai...
    12: ...ces executed a surprise attack in violation of a truce agreed to a few days before, nearly costing Dra...
    13: ...and encouraged Drake's raids, signed a temporary truce with King [[Philip II of Spain]], and so was un...
    58: ...England is ever in peril, if Sir Francis Drake's drum is beaten, he will return to save the country.
    60: ...poet Sir [[Henry Newbolt]] in the poem ''Drake's Drum''. A similarly named poem was also written by th...
  10. List of philosophers (79981 bytes)
    15: ...eon Abravanel|Judah ben Isaac Abravanel]], (1460?-1535?){{fn|C}}{{fn|R}}
    33: *[[Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa]], (1436-1535){{fn|R}}
    120: *[[Averroes]] (or ''Ibn Rushd''), (1126-1198){{fn|C}}{{fn|O}}{{fn|R}}
    158: *[[Bruno Bauer]], (1809-1882){{fn|O}}{{fn|R}}
    231: *[[Rudjer Boscovich]], (1711-1787){{fn|C}}
  11. Knights Hospitaller (26158 bytes)
    1: ...Order of Knights of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem'' or ''Knights of Malta'' or ''Knights of Rh...
    5: ...aschid of [[Egypt]] to rebuild the hospice in [[Jerusalem]]. The hospice, which was built on the site ...
    7: ...up just cared for those pilgrims who made it to Jerusalem but the order soon extended into providing a...
    9: ...r Hospitallers, at the height of the Kingdom of Jerusalem the Hospitallers held seven great forts and ...
    15: ...g islands, as well as the Anatolian ports of [[Bodrum]] and [[Castellorizon]].
  12. Iron (23778 bytes)
    7: ...wspan="3" valign="middle">'''Fe'''<br>[[Ruthenium|Ru]]&nbsp;&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;</td></tr>
    46: <td>[[Crystal structure]] </td><td>cubic,...
    51: ... </td><td>[[1 E3 K|1808 K]] (1535 ?[[Celsius|C]] / 2795 ?[[Fahrenheit|F]])</td></tr...
    135: ...]]. Its symbol ''Fe'' is an abbreviation of ''ferrum'', the [[Latin]] word for iron.
    144: ...e [[hull (ship)|hull]]s of large [[ship]]s, and structural components for [[building]]s. [[Steel]] is ...
  13. Chile (39914 bytes)
    1: ...to the east, [[Bolivia]] to the northeast and [[Peru]] to the north.<!--
    39: ...m [[Spain]]<br>[[September 18]], [[1810]]<br>[[February 12]], [[1818]] |
    56: ...]'s first Spanish expedition south from Peru in [[1535]]-[[1536|36]] called themselves the "men of Chill...
    64: ..., and Chile became part of the [[Viceroyalty of Peru]].
    66: ...[[1553]] resulted in Valdivia's death and the destruction of many of the colony's principal settlement...
  14. Tropical savanna (1816 bytes)
    1: ...Fernandez de Oviedo y Valdes|Oviedo y Valdes]], [[1535]]), by the late 1800s it was used to mean "land w...
    7: ...'' [[Temperate grasslands]],[[savannas]], and [[shrublands]]
  15. Francisco Vásquez de Coronado (19760 bytes)
    8: ...lantado]]'' of [[Costa Rica]]. <ref> [http://genforum.genealogy.com/coronado/messages/30.html Origin ...
    11: ...n]] of his family, Coronado went to [[Mexico]] in 1535 at about age 25, with the entourage of [[Viceroy]...
    18: ...ame="autogenerated1">Winship. P. 38</ref> At the ruins of Chichilticalli he turns around because of "...
    20: Coronado set out from Compostela in [[February 23]] [[1540]] at the head of a large expeditio...
    23: ...it was just a complex of simple [[pueblo]]s constructed by the [[Zuni]] Indians. The soldiers conside...
  16. Hernán Cortés (42809 bytes)
    14: ...r conquered the [[Inca]] empire of modern-day [[Peru]] (not to be confused with another Francisco Piza...
    20: ...d boy who had returned home only to find himself frustrated by life in his small provincial town.
    38: ...overnor Velázquez became strained.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} This all began once news of [[Juan de G...
    47: ...from a shipwreck and joined the troops.<ref name=Grunberg/> Jeronimo de Aguilar, a Franciscan priest, ...
    49: ...és was determined. Leaving a hundred men in Veracruz, Cortès marched on [[Tenochtitlan]] in mid-Augu...
  17. Hernando de Soto explorer (34946 bytes)
    7: ...and tactician, but was notorious for the extreme brutality with which he wielded these gifts.
    11: ==First expedition – The Conquest of Peru==
    12: ...tly before Pizarro departed for the interior of Peru, bringing his own men with him on ships he had hi...
    14: ...zarro sent de Soto with four men to scout for the rumored army. <!-- De Soto had 200 Spaniards to comp...
    16: ... later became known as [[Lima]]) on the coast. In 1535 King [[Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor|Charles]] aw...
  18. Judge (10187 bytes)
    13: ...e [[judiciary]]. In a democratic country with a [[rule of law]], judges are supposed to be [[impartial...
    17: ...rial system]] of [[justice]] under the applicable rules of [[civil procedure]].
    42: ...als are "judges." New York judges who deal with trusts and estates are known as "Surrogates."
    44: ... of courts of limited jurisdiction (such as [[bankruptcy]] courts or [[juvenile]] courts) were sometim...
    77: |( [[1478]] &ndash; [[1535]] )
  19. Green alga (4059 bytes)
    39: ...d plants. ''AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY 91'' (10): 1535-1556 OCT

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