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- Anna of Austria (1601-1666) (1994 bytes)
2: ...' ([[September 22]], [[1601]] - [[January 20]], [[1666]]) was Queen Consort of [[France]] and [[Regent]]...
6: ...is XIV of France. Anne assumed the regency but entrusted the government to the prime minister, [[Jules...
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- Anna of Austria (1601-1666) (1994 bytes)
2: ...' ([[September 22]], [[1601]] - [[January 20]], [[1666]]) was Queen Consort of [[France]] and [[Regent]]...
6: ...is XIV of France. Anne assumed the regency but entrusted the government to the prime minister, [[Jules... - 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 ...
62: ... on [[Isle La Motte, Vermont|Isle La Motte]] in [[1666]] as part of their [[fortification]] of Lake Cham...
66: In [[1731]], the French arrived. Here they constructed a small temporary wooden stockade (Fort de Pi... - Ammonius Hermiae (1773 bytes)
6: ...by J. C. Orelli, ''Alex. Aphrod., Ammonii, et aliorum de Fato quae supersunt'' (Zurich, 1824).
9: ...ation and scholia, at Leiden, 1621, at Helmstadt, 1666, and at Paris, 1850. - St. Peter's Basilica (17805 bytes)
2: ...]]. [[Pope]]s have been buried there, too. Construction of the [[basilica]] began in [[1506]] and wa...
8: ...fficially recognized Christianity he started construction in [[324]] of a great basilica in this exact...
12: ...composed of many valuable artistic elements. Construction started under [[Pope Julius II]] in 1506 and...
20: ...eath (1564), the dome was finished as far as the drum, the base on which domes sit. The dome was vault...
22: ...s (not to the public) all around the base of the drum; they are dwarfed by the monumental scale of the... - List of painters (54090 bytes)
18: *[[Peter Paul Rubens]], ([[1577]]-[[1640]]), Belgian painter
94: *[[Giovanni Francesco Barbieri]] ([[1591]]-[[1666]])
188: *[[P. Rostrup Bøyesen]] ([[1882]]-[[1952]])
210: *[[Rush Brown]] ([[1948]]-)
211: *[[Jan Brueghel the Elder]] ([[1568]]-[[1625]]) - Robert Hooke (5017 bytes)
6: ...fter the [[Great Fire of London|Great Fire]] in [[1666]]. He worked on designing the [[Royal Greenwich O...
14: ... outstripped the capabilities of any previous instruments.
16: ...s other significant achievements include the construction of the first [[Gregorian telescope|Gregorian... - John Locke (14749 bytes)
8: ...]], [[Robert Hooke]] and [[Richard Lower]]. In [[1666]], he met [[Anthony Ashley Cooper, 1st Earl of Sh...
12: ...e advice of several physicians and was likely instrumental in persuading Shaftesbury to undergo an ope...
24: ...lieved, the national church could serve as an instrument for social harmony.
31: ... diversity. Locke also distinguishes between the truly existing ''primary qualities'' of bodies, like ...
37: ...its trust when the laws are violated or when the trust of prerogative is abused. - Henry Morgan (5671 bytes)
4: ...[[Granada, Nicaragua | Granada]] were taken. In [[1666]] Morgan commanded a ship in Edward Mansfield's e...
6: ...commission and had been accompanied by frightful cruelties and excesses, but the governor of Jamaica e...
8: ...onsiderable amount of treasure from one which had run aground, exacted a heavy ransom as the price of ...
10: ... brilliant exploit was tarnished by the habitual cruelty of Morgan's crews.
16: ... is immortalized now by Captain Morgan's Spiced [[Rum]], which comes, cheekily enough, from [[Puerto R... - Thomas Hobbes (26163 bytes)
20: ... be regulated if Men were not to fall back into "brutishness and misery". Thus he proposed to unite th...
22: ...1637, to a country riven with discontent which disrupted him from the orderly execution of his philoso...
32: ... [[1647]], Hobbes was engaged as mathematical instructor to the young [[Charles II of England|Charles,...
36: ...'[[De Cive]]'' under the title of ''Philosophical Rudiments concerning Government and Society''. Meanw...
42: ... [[state of nature]] is "solitary, poore, nasty, brutish, and short" (xiii). - List of philosophers (79981 bytes)
110: *[[Mary Astell]], (1666-1731){{fn|C}}{{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}}
254: *[[Peter Browne]], (1666-1735){{fn|R}} - Sikhism (31029 bytes)
2: ...[Bhakti]], [[monism]], [[Vedic]] metaphysics, [[guru]] ideal, and [[bhajan]]s) as well as [[Sufi|Sufi ...
4: ...is, "There is no Hindu, there is no Muslim." [[Guru Gobind Singh]] reinforced these words by saying "...
6: ...e (Five Beloved Ones), who in turn baptised the Guru at his request.
8: ...]] in AD [[1604]].(Although some of the earlier gurus are also known to have documented their revelati...
10: ...nally One, the Sovereign and omnipotent God (the Truth of Love). - Theories and sociology of the history of science (16096 bytes)
9: ...rnal]]s and are hypothetically subjected to the scrutiny of their peers, though a number of scholarly ...
11: ... Porta]]. The Academy had an exclusive membership rule: discovery of a new law of nature was a prequis...
13: ...d as an institution of the government of France [[1666]], meeting in the King's library. The [[Akademie ...
31: ... work of [[Galileo]], and before him, [[Giordano Bruno]], burned at the stake, for his statements on [...
39: ...ad of theories which are progressively closer to truth. In this model, scientific progress is a linear... - Comedy of manners (2474 bytes)
3: ...]) and ''Le Misanthrope'' (''The Misanthrope'', [[1666]]).
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