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- List of U.S. state capitals (5230 bytes)
149: | [[1914]] — [[1917]]
159: | [[Rhode Island]]
160: | [[Providence, Rhode Island|Providence]]
193: | [[1919]] — [[1928]] (Legislative Building) - List of explorers (24013 bytes)
30: ...]]?-[[1377]]?), [[Morocco|Moroccan]] [[Berber]] Muslim, visited [[Mecca]] several times, travelled to ...
34: *[[Moric Benovsky]], [[Slovakia|Slovak]]
53: ...ry]] [[Portuguese]] explorer of the [[Atlantic]] islands)
66: ... to the [[Indies]]; discovered various lands and islands and established a colony on [[Hispaniola]]
67: ...Pacific]], discovering or mapping many lands and islands - November 4 (10686 bytes)
55: *[[1914]] - [[Martin Balsam]], actor (d. [[1996]])
152: [[sl:4. november]] - List of people by name: Ab (7347 bytes)
22: *[[Khwaja Ahmad Abbas|Abbas, Khwaja Ahmad]], (1914-1987), film director
44: *[[Abd-ar-rahman I]], (died 788), Muslim Spain ruler
47: *[[Abd-ar-rahman IV]], (circa 1017), Muslim Spain ruler
48: *[[Abd-ar-rahman V]], (1023-1024), Muslim Spain ruler
54: *[[Humayun Abdulali|Abdulali, Humayun]], (1914-2001), [[India]]n [[ornithologist]] - Alexandra Kollontai (3203 bytes)
1: ...st as a member of the [[Menshevik]]s, then from [[1914]] on as a [[Bolshevik]]. She was effectively exil...
5: ...side with either faction. However, she came to dislike aspects of Bolshevism and opted to join the Me...
7: In [[1914]], Kollontai joined the Bolsheviks and returned t... - Rosa Luxemburg (23905 bytes)
10: ...s]], [[economics]] and [[mathematics]] simultaneously. Her specialised subjects were ''Staatswissensch...
32: ...a]]. The following day, the [[Reichstag]] unanimously agreed to finance the war by war [[bonds]]. All ...
34: ...e [[Thrace|Thracian]] gladiator who tried to free slaves from the [[Roman Kingdom|Roman]]s. Luxemburg ...
36: ...evik model.) It was in this context that she famously wrote ""''Freiheit ist immer die Freiheit des An...
48: ...emocracy seeks and finds the ways, and particular slogans, of the workers' struggle only in the course... - Emmeline Pankhurst (1950 bytes)
7: ...tobiography, ''My Own Story'', was published in [[1914]]. She died ten years after seeing her most arde... - Margaret Sanger (12025 bytes)
7: ...stricken [[Lower East Side, Manhattan|East Side]] slums of [[Manhattan]]. That same year, she also sta...
9: In 1914, Sanger launched ''The Woman Rebel'', a newspaper...
13: ...also formed the National Committee on Federal Legislation for Birth Control and served as its presiden...
24: ...on of those with infectious diseases such as [[measles]]). - Mary Cassatt (9047 bytes)
6: ...ing instructors and fellow male students, and the slow pace of her courses, she decided to study the [...
25: ...ican collectors, recognition of her art came more slowly in the [[United States]].
29: ...s in [[1911]], she did not slow down, but after [[1914]] she stopped painting because of near blindness....
42: ... of Madame Sisley 1873.jpg|''Portrait of Madame Sisley'' (1873)
82: Image:Cassatt Mary Sleepy Baby 1910.jpg|''Sleepy Baby'' (1910) - Isak Dinesen (2959 bytes)
7: In 1914 she married her cousin, [[Baron Bror von Blixen-F...
9: ...d go on to publish several other works simultaneously in Danish and English, mostly collections of sho...
30: * ''Letters from Africa, 1914-1931'' (posthumous 1981, USA) - Marguerite Duras (1799 bytes)
3: '''Marguerite Donnadieu''' ([[April 4]], [[1914]] - [[March 3]], [[1996]]), better known as '''Ma...
7: ...name(s) based on her work, Duras then published a slightly different work, ''L'Amant de la Chine du No... - Nina Hamnett (3501 bytes)
3: ...the [[London School of Art]] until [[1910]]. In [[1914]] she went to the [[Montparnasse]] Quarter in [[P... - Georgia O'Keeffe (2572 bytes)
6: ...in the public schools in [[Amarillo, Texas]] in [[1914]]. In [[1916]] started teaching at [[Columbia Col... - Gertrude Stein (13569 bytes)
19: ...ght, she had a large circle of friends and tirelessly promoted herself. Her judgments in literature an...
23: ...vil War]]. She would later start a project of translating speeches by [[Vichy regime]] leader [[Henri ...
71: *''[[Tender buttons: objects, food, rooms]]'' (1914) [http://www.bartleby.com/140/ online version] - Nancy Harkness Love (1763 bytes)
1: '''Nancy Harkness Love''' ([[February 14]], [[1914]] - [[October 22]], [[1976]]) was an [[United Sta... - Marina Tsvetaeva (21885 bytes)
20: ... Alya (born 1912) and Irina (born 1917). Then, in 1914, Efron volunteered for the front; by 1917 he was ...
26: ...e occasions himself. It was bound to end disastrously and it did. Her break-up with Rozdevitch in [[19...
28: ...t to artists and writers who had lived in [[Czechoslovakia]]. In addition, she tried to make whatever ...
34: ...estions and ended up reading them some French translations of her poetry. The police concluded that sh...
39: ...o her. Boris Pasternak found her bits of work translating poetry, but otherwise the established Soviet... - Suzanne Valadon (4068 bytes)
8: ... ''Girl Braiding Her Hair''. Valadon haunted the sleazy bars of Paris and in [[1889]] Toulouse-Lautre...
26: ... painter, [[Andr頕tter]]. She married Utter in [[1914]], but the marriage also did not last. - Sarah Bernhardt (3531 bytes)
10: ...arried a Polish princess, Maria Jablonowska, 1863-1914). Later lovers included several artists ([[Gusta...
12: ...l. The latter included ''Sarah Bernhardt ࠂelle-Isle'' ([[1912]]), a film about her daily life at hom...
14: ... made a member of France's [[Legion of Honor]] in 1914. - May Irwin (2858 bytes)
12: ... was one of America's most beloved performers. In 1914, she made her second [[silent film]] appearance, ...
14: ...nd Islands]] and at her winter home on [[Merritt Island, Florida]] before retiring to a farm near [[Cl... - Suzanne Lenglen (11495 bytes)
3: ... [[1926]], winning 25 [[Grand Slam (tennis)|Grand Slam]] titles. A flamboyant, trendsetting athlete, s...
10: ...nglen played in the final of the [[1914 in sports|1914]] French Championships. (The tournament, a foreru...
14: ...h;8, 4–6, 9–7 to take her first Grand Slam victory.
42: ...wne]]. Browne, winner of the US Open from 1912 to 1914, was 35 and considered to be past her prime, alth...
46: ... located next to the courts of [[Roland Garros]], slowly expanded and was recognised as a federal trai...
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