Search results
|
No page with that title exists You can create an article with this title or put up a request for it. Please search Wikipedia before creating an article to avoid duplicating an existing one, which may have a different name or spelling.
Showing below up to 20 results starting with #1.
View (previous 20) (next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).
Article title matches
- Marie de France (1845 bytes)
1: ...which translates as, "My name is Marie, I am from France."
3: ...me as Eleanor's eldest daughter Mary, Princess of France and Countess of Champagne, though this identifica...
7: * Burgess, Glyn S. ''The Lais of Marie de France: Text and Context''. Athens: University of Georgi...
8: ..., Joan and Robert Hanning. ''The Lais of Marie de France''. Durham, N. C.: Labyrinth Press, 1982.
10: * Rychner, Jean. 1983. ''Les Lais de Marie de France''. Paris: Honore頃hampion.
Page text matches
- Mexico (27255 bytes)
22: leader_titles = [[President of Mexico|President]] |
50: cctld = [[.gov|.gob]] [[.edu]] [[.mx]] |
64: ...s, as they were sometimes called in memory of [[Aztlan], the starting point of their tribes wanderings...
72: ...m the United States, on the condition that the settlers convert to Catholicism and assume Mexican citi...
74: ...-arrived [[English language|English-speaking]] settlers, declared independence from Mexico at [[Washin... - Rio de Janeiro (14538 bytes)
15: ...formed with nearby native tribes to defend the settlement against invaders - neighbor [[Niter, for...
17: ...ce was since then called ''Morro do Castelo'' (Castle Hill). Therefore, the city developed from curren...
19: ... the city was threaten or invaded by several - mostly French - pirates and buccaneers, such as [[Jean-...
21: The city remained mostly a colonial capital until [[1808]], when the Port...
40: ...mengo]] which composes Rio's famous [[beach]] coastline. - List of explorers (24013 bytes)
23: ...]], founded Darién, oldest surviving European settlement in the South American continent.
27: *[[Robert Bartlett]] ([[1875]]-[[1946]]), notable Arctic explorer
31: ...ch]] explorer, mapped the West [[Australia]]n coastline.
32: *[[Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen]], [[Russians|Russian]] exp...
33: *[[Joseph René Bellot]] [[France|French]] [[Arctic]] explorer - History of China (45919 bytes)
28: ...256 BC]], he was largely a figurehead and held little real power.
36: ... Chinese]] homeland and to unite them under a tightly centralized [[Legalism (philosophy)|Legalist]] g...
44: ...三国), a time that has since been greatly romanticized in works such as ''[[Romance of the...
51: ...e. 1996. "Later Han Military Administration: An Outline of the Military Administration of the Later Ha...
63: ...ified by [[Fu Jian]] who was defeated at the [[Battle of Feishui]] when he attempted to invade South C... - King Arthur (22450 bytes)
1: ... mentions and Welsh texts he is never given the title "King." Early texts refer to him as ''[[dux]] b...
7: ... Riothamus is a shadowy figure of whom we know little, and scholars are not certain whether the "Brett...
9: ... identification unlikely, as there seems to be little reason for him to have become a major legendary ...
13: ...s]], led the forces battling the Saxons at the battle of [[Mons Badonicus]].
19: ...r of feasts, with his tall blades red from the battle which all men remember." - Jules Dumont d'Urville (2251 bytes)
1: ...]], [[1790]] – [[May 8]], [[1842]]) was a [[France|French]] [[List of explorers|explorer]] and [[Fre...
4: ...]. He immediately arranged for the government of France to acquire one of the most valuable and famous st...
16: ...in the [[Cimetière du Montparnasse]], [[Paris]], France. - Jacques Cartier (8139 bytes)
5: Born in [[Saint-Malo]], [[France]] in 1491, Cartier was part of a respectable fami...
9: Very little information is available on Cartier's character ...
13: ... he planted a cross and claimed the territory for France. During this trip he took [[Domagaya]] and [[Taig...
17: ...hmen. The site of their arrival has been confidently identified as the beginning of the Sainte-Marie ...
19: ...Stadacona as it was by then too late to return to France. Cartier and his men prepared for winter by stre... - Industrial Revolution (30001 bytes)
12: ... occurred in Britain. In other nations, such as [[France]], markets were split up by local regions, which ...
16: ...om overseas trade. Their social position grew greatly. The manufacturers were ready to invest in the m...
20: ...science and technology since the 17th century greatly helped in the rise of the Industrial Revolution....
32: ...r of study-touring; some nations, like Sweden and France, trained civil servants or technicians to underta...
55: ...nding with emery paste, was very laborious and costly. - Steel (28384 bytes)
3: ...ngth|stronger]] than iron, but is also more [[brittle]]. One classical definition is that steels are i...
5: Currently there are several classes of steels in which car...
13: ...l composition. As such, it requires extremely little thermal [[activation energy]] to form.
19: ...gh time for cementite, etc., to form) and help settle the internal stresses and defects. This softens...
21: ...itrogen]], and [[phosphorus]] make steel more brittle, so these commonly found elements must be remove... - Bagpipes (20858 bytes)
33: ...y abbreviated GHBs), which were developed in [[Scotland]] and [[Ireland]]. The picture above shows a s...
42: ...ration can also be found having been played in Scotland in the [[1700]]s. In all other respects the B...
53: ...es with the [[Northumbrian smallpipe]] for the title of most developed bagpipe in existence. This Ir...
63: ...]] folk dancing. It is the most famous bagpipe of France, but not the most played due to the revival of ot...
65: ===Center-France bagpipe=== - Treasury (1846 bytes)
5: ...r of the Exchequer]]. The traditional honorary title of [[First Lord of the Treasury]] is held by the...
14: * [[Trésor public]] in France
18: * [[Jean-Baptiste Colbert]] (France) - November 4 (10686 bytes)
11: ...f Washington]] opens in [[Seattle, Washington|Seattle]], [[Washington]] as the Territorial University
12: * [[1864]] - [[American Civil War]]: [[Battle of Johnsonville]] - [[Confederate States of Amer...
20: ...abteilung]] or SA is formally formed by [[Adolf Hitler]]
25: ...lamein]] - Disobeying a direct order by [[Adolf Hitler]], General Field Marshal [[Erwin Rommel]] leads...
31: ...people die, 30,000 are rendered homeless, and countless [[Renaissance]] artworks and books are destroy... - Raccoon (4751 bytes)
24: ... wearing coonskin hats. Populations suffered greatly but have recovered. Raccoons are one of the lar...
35: ...tablished itself in a small area of north-central France and in a considerable area of central Germany, wh... - Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom (35966 bytes)
9: ... spelling: the Isle of Man has one "n", but her title, Lord of Mann, has two-->; she has reigned in th...
17: ...ritish sovereign in the male line, she held the title of a [[British princess]] with the style [[HRH|'...
20: ...ost recently during her [[2004]] state visit to [[France]] to commemorate the centenary of the [[Entente C...
23: ...n during World War II|evacuated]] to [[Windsor Castle]], Berkshire. There was some suggestion that the...
27: ...ther with other students. It is said that she greatly enjoyed this and that this experience led her to... - Melisende of Jerusalem (16880 bytes)
5: ...d after her paternal grandmother, Melisende of Montlhery, wife of Hugh I, [[Count of Rethel]]. She had...
9: ...the [[Count of Boulogne|County of Boulogne]] in [[France]]. Melisende was the heir of this dynasty, and wa...
15: ...r knights Fulk excluded Melisende from granting titles and other forms of patronage, and publicly dism...
25: ...n she is seen in the historical record granting titles of nobility, fiefdoms, appointments and offices...
35: ...sader expedition was led by French [[Louis VII of France|King Louis]] and the German Emperor [[Conrad II, ... - Agnes of Courtenay (6051 bytes)
3: ...lon]], in [[1157]], after Hugh was captured in battle by the Muslims. The marriage was opposed by the ...
7: ...riage was annulled. Agnes continued to hold the title Countess of Jaffa and Ascalon and received a pen...
15: ...le the Haute Cour and the kings of [[England]], [[France]], and [[Germany]] were to choose the next monarc... - Sibylla of Jerusalem (11497 bytes)
21: ...ger, was at that point was considered equally entitled to succeed. Sibylla herself though was not excl...
23: ...or the Haute Cour and the kings of [[England]], [[France]], and [[Germany]] to choose the next monarch, Si...
37: ...te was fatal, and Saladin routed them at the [[Battle of Hattin]] on [[July 4]], [[1187]]. Guy was amo...
41: ...he remnant of the kingdom, as Guy had lost the battle of Hattin. After about a month spent outside the...
43: ... 1191, mostly by troops brought by [[Philip II of France]] and [[Richard I of England]].) - Isabella of Jerusalem (7928 bytes)
3: ...er mother and stepfather [[Balian of Ibelin]], mostly in Nablus.
5: ...aps as young as 11. On their wedding night the castle of [[Kerak]] was attacked by the forces of [[Sal...
7: ...when she was a child and he was a slave in the castle. And when Saladin received these gifts he was ex...
11: ... Sibylla and Isabella were considered equally entitled to succeed.
15: ...nder the circumstances Guy continued to use the title and demanded to be recognized as king, despite s... - Yolanda of Flanders (2422 bytes)
5: ...id not want the throne. As Robert was still in [[France]] at the time, there was technically no emperor u... - Eleanor of Aquitaine (11927 bytes)
3: ...iddle Ages]]. She was [[Queen consort]] of both [[France]] and [[England]] in her lifetime.
8: ...chest of the provinces that would become modern [[France]], when her brother, William Aigret, died as a ba...
10: ...|Louis VI]] had died, and Eleanor became Queen of France.
12: ... of women in the campaign, with her, the Queen of France, as their leader.
20: ...leanor conceived their second daughter, [[Alix of France]] (their first was [[Marie de Champagne|Marie]]),...
View (previous 20) (next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).