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- Puritan (15882 bytes)
5: ... "Puritan" was most often used by opponents and detractors of the group, rather than by the practition...
8: ...twright (churchman)|Thomas Cartwright]], [[Walter Travers]] and [[Andrew Melville]] had gone into exil...
10: ...ons of kings and popes. They all argued for a restructuring and "purifying" of church practice throug...
12: ...pope|popish]] pomp and rags." (See [[Vestments controversy]].) They also objected to ecclesiastical co...
14: ...]] into a specific target of their grievances. [[Tract]]s such as the ''[[Martin Marprelate]]'' serie... - Artemisia Gentileschi (23093 bytes)
7: ... of the school of [[Caravaggio]]. Artemisia was introduced to painting in her father's workshop, showi...
14: ...trial Tassi was imprisoned for just one year. The trial has subsequently influenced the [[feminism|fem...
16: ...um of Naples]], is impressive for the violence portrayed, and was interpreted as a wish of psycologica...
18: ...became a successful court painter, enjoying the patronage of the [[Medici]] and [[Charles I of England...
24: ...hew of the great [[Michelangelo]]): busy with construction of a maison to celebrate the notable ancest... - Adam and Eve (8913 bytes)
2: ...ead and how it is interpreted. Depending on which tradition is believed, she may or may not have been ...
11: ...0px|thumb|right|''Adam and Eve'', by [[English poetry|English poet]] and [[Painting|painter]] [[Willia...
12: ...|200px|thumb|right|Traditional woodblock print portraying Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden with many...
13: ... means "red earth"), and God breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and gave him dominion over...
15: ...oy its fruits under this one prohibition: "Of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil thou shalt no... - List of painters (54090 bytes)
14: ...[1912]]-[[1956]]), US [[Abstract expressionism|abstract expressionist]] [[painter]]
60: *[[Sofonisba Anguissola]] ([[1532]]-[[1625]])
188: *[[P. Rostrup Bøyesen]] ([[1882]]-[[1952]])
206: *[[Bertram Brooker]] ([[1888]]-[[1955]])
211: *[[Jan Brueghel the Elder]] ([[1568]]-[[1625]]) - Timeline of microscope technology (1673 bytes)
11: * [[1625]] - Giovanni Faber of Bamberg ([[1574]] - [[1629]...
12: ...micrographs. He coins the word ''cell'' for the structures he discovers in [[cork (material)|cork]] b...
14: ...[[1931]] - [[Ernst Ruska]] builds the first [[electron microscope]].
15: ...]] in Physics for his invention of the [[phase contrast optical microscope]]. - Pirate Ship (44502 bytes)
9: ....jpg|thumb|left|250px|Mosaic of a [[Trireme|Roman Trireme]] in [[Tunisia]].]]
10: ...Parliament/2587/trade.html Phoenician Economy and Trade].</ref> By the 1st century BC, there were pira...
22: In the Roman province of Britannia, [[Saint Patrick]] was captured and enslaved by [[Ireland|Irish...
24: ...their [[hit-and-run tactics]] - a safe place to retreat to if the battle turned against them.
27: ...s far as the Black Sea and Persia. The lack of centralized powers all over [[Europe]] during the [[Mid... - Henry Hudson (4760 bytes)
5: In [[1608]] he tried again, this time sailing farther to the east a...
9: ...ntilist]] laws England had enacted to protect its trade routes from the Dutch. He was soon released.
13: ...e the eastern shores. In November the ship became trapped in the ice in [[James Bay]], and the crew mo...
17: ... World or the description of West India'') from [[1625]]. The same situation applies to the voyage of [[... - Augusta, Maine (4876 bytes)
16: metro pop = |
28: ...ers from the [[Plymouth Colony]] in [[1625]] as a trading post. Located on the Kennebec River at highe...
32: ...well in [[1771]]. In February of [[1797]], the upstream area of Hallowell know as "the Fort" was incor...
39: ...the city has a total area of 150.9 [[square kilometre|km²]] (58.3 [[square mile|mi²]]). 143...
51: ==Attractions in and near Augusta== - List of astronomers (40322 bytes)
1: '''Famous [[astronomer]]s and [[astrophysicist]]s''' include:
33: *[[Anders Ůgstr? ([[Sweden]], [[1814]] – [[1874]])
35: *[[Petrus Apianus]] ([[Germany]], [[1495]] – [[1557...
66: ...[[Johann Bayer]] ([[Germany]], [[1572]] – [[1625]])
72: *[[Wilhelm von Biela]] ([[Austria]], [[1782]] – [[1856]]) - History of Germany (53864 bytes)
5: ...e [[Low Countries]], and parts of northern and central [[Italy]]. But its sovereign was usually the Ge...
10: ...[[Germanic tribes]], [[Confederations of Germanic Tribes]], [[Germania]], [[Germania Inferior]], [[Ger...
15: ...e Rhine. Roman forts were built at [[Cologne]], [[Trier]], [[Koblenz]], [[Mainz]] and elsewhere to sec...
17: ... the emergence of a number of large West Germanic tribes - Alemanni, Franks, Chatti, Bajuwari, Saxons,...
19: ...heir own ancestral land. The mingling of Germanic traditions and the Christian religion gave rise to t... - Germany in the Middle Ages (53864 bytes)
5: ...e [[Low Countries]], and parts of northern and central [[Italy]]. But its sovereign was usually the Ge...
10: ...[[Germanic tribes]], [[Confederations of Germanic Tribes]], [[Germania]], [[Germania Inferior]], [[Ger...
15: ...e Rhine. Roman forts were built at [[Cologne]], [[Trier]], [[Koblenz]], [[Mainz]] and elsewhere to sec...
17: ... the emergence of a number of large West Germanic tribes - Alemanni, Franks, Chatti, Bajuwari, Saxons,...
19: ...heir own ancestral land. The mingling of Germanic traditions and the Christian religion gave rise to t... - Elamite Empire (23098 bytes)
8: The Elamites called their country ''Haltamti'' (in later Elamite, ''Atamti''), bor...
10: ...lemy]] called it ''Susiana''. Though primarily centred in the province of [[Khuzestan]] for the durati...
17: ...lamite period; 3100?2900 BCE, Iran, kept at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.]]
19: ...dating to ca. [[2650 BC]]. But we can only really trace Elamite history from records dating to beginni...
21: ..., this was done through a federated governmental structure.
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