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- List of explorers (24013 bytes)
3: {{compactTOC}}__NOTOC__
23: ...n]], founded Darién, oldest surviving European settlement in the South American continent.
27: *[[Robert Bartlett]] ([[1875]]-[[1946]]), notable Arctic explorer
30: *[[Ibn Battuta|Abu Abdullah Muhammad Ibn Battuta]], ([[1304]]?-[[1377]]?), [[Morocco|Moroccan]]...
32: *[[Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen]], [[Russians|Russian]] ex... - List of people by name: Ac (3800 bytes)
21: *[[Sharon Acker|Acker, Sharon]] (born 1935)[http://imdb.com/name/nm0009943]
39: ... Gottlieb Ackermann|Ackermann, Johann Christian Gottlieb]] (1756-1801)
41: *[[Leopold Ackermann|Ackermann, Leopold]] (1771-1831)
43: ...rlotte Ackermann|Ackermann, Marie Magdalene Charlotte]] (1757-1775)
46: ...ophie Charlotte Ackermann|Ackermann, Sophie Charlotte]] (1714-1792) - Victoria of the United Kingdom (38571 bytes)
7: ...ria''' (Alexandrina Victoria [[Wettin (dynasty)|Wettin]], ''[[n饝]'' [[House of Hanover|Hanover]]) ([...
12: ...e-Coburg-Saalfeld]], the sister of Princess Charlotte's widower [[Leopold I of Belgium|Prince Leopold ...
16: ...a scenario, Parliament passed the ''[[Regency Act 1831]]'', under which it was provided that Victoria's ...
20: ...s descendants a separate family surname, [[Mountbatten-Windsor]].)
37: ...acy was behind the assassination attempt; others attributed the plot to supporters of the heir-presump... - Sophie Germain (4906 bytes)
1: [[Image:Mattehistorie germain.jpg|frame|Sophie Germain]]
3: ...''' ([[April 1]], [[1776]] – [[June 27]], [[1831]]) was a [[France|French]] [[mathematician]].
5: ...s]] at age thirteen, despite her parents' strong attempts to dissuade her from engaging in a 'men's pr...
7: ...ange|Joseph-Louis Lagrange]]'s teachings and submitted papers and assignments under the [[pseudonym]] ...
9: ...had never heard of her. She then wrote to him admitting she was female, to which he responded: - Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (8386 bytes)
2: ...- [[May 8]], [[1891]] [[London]], [[England]]), better known as '''Helena Blavatsky''' or '''Madame Bl...
7: ...iete Spirite for [[occult]] phenomena with Emma Cutting (later Emma Coulomb), which closed after dissa...
11: In [[1874]], Helena met [[Henry Steel Olcott]]; he was a lawyer, agricultural expert, and jour...
15: ...ernal conventional manifestations. Imperfect men attempting to translate the divine knowledge had corr...
21: ...], and one third to India where her ashes were scattered in the [[Ganges River]]. [[May 8]] is celebra... - Locomotive (16705 bytes)
20: ... of a historical train. Pictures provided by by [http://classroomclipart.com Classroom Clip Art]]]
23: ...lar service in the world, but John Bull, built in 1831, is currently the oldest operable steam locomotiv...
25: ... countries such as Germany and the United States attained speeds very close to this, and this is gener...
27: ...turbines, have been experimented with, but seen little use.
29: ...[[railfan|railfans]] or [[train spotting|train spotters]], although some [[narrow gauge]] lines in Ger... - James Monroe (11107 bytes)
12: | date of death=[[July 4]], [[1831]]
18: ...''' ([[April 28]], [[1758]] – [[July 4]], [[1831]]) was the fifth ([[1817]]–[[1825]]) [[Pres...
22: ...chool of Campelltown Academy in Viginia and then attended the [[College of William and Mary]], fought ...
34: ...avery in [[Missouri]] precipitated two years of bitter debate in Congress. The [[Missouri Compromise]]...
38: ...ropean Power." Some 20 years after Monroe died in 1831, this became known as the Monroe Doctrine. - John Quincy Adams (11783 bytes)
10: | place of birth=[[Braintree]], [[Massachusetts]]
22: ...bar and commenced practice in [[Boston, Massachusetts]].
26: He was elected to the [[Massachusetts]] State Senate in [[1802]], and was an unsuccess...
37: ...ew Jackson|Jackson]], who defeated Adams in the latter's quest for re-election, was sworn in to replac...
61: ...n="left"|[[Attorney General of the United States|Attorney General]]||align="left"|'''[[William Wirt]]'... - Andrew Jackson (23546 bytes)
22: Born in a backwoods settlement in the [[Waxhaw, North Carolina|Waxhaws are...
26: ... The war, and particularly his command at the [[Battle of New Orleans]] on [[January 8]], [[1815]], ma...
32: ...in his [[U.S. presidential election, 1828|second attempt]] in [[1828]] as the first nominee of the [[D...
55: ...ur liberty, most dear!," an astonishingly quick-witted riposte.
57: ...isis was resolved in [[1833]] with a compromise settlement which, by substantially lowering the tariff... - Martin Van Buren (21629 bytes)
27: ... fall under his influence. In [[1803]] he was admitted to the bar and continued in active and successf...
29: ...George Clinton]] (and later of his nephew, [[De Witt Clinton]]), [[Robert R. Livingston]] and Aaron Bu...
33: ...812]]-[[1820]]). In [[1815]] he became the state attorney-general, an office which he held, still as a...
35: ... originate the system, but won the nickname of "Little Magician" for the skill with which he exploited...
43: ...anama Congress. As chairman of the judiciary committee, he brought forward a number of measures for th... - George M. Dallas (3858 bytes)
5: ...date for reelection. He was chairman of the Committee on Naval Affairs.
7: Dallas resumed the practice of law. He was attorney general of Pennsylvania from 1833 to [[1835]...
15: ...ict of Pennsylvania]]|before=?|after=?|years=1829-1831}}
16: ...[Isaac D. Barnard]]|after=[[Samuel McKean]]|years=1831-1833}}
17: {{succession box|title=[[Attorney General of Pennsylvania]]|before=?|after=?|y... - James Buchanan (15634 bytes)
50: ... the general [[populace]] rated him last as well[http://home.nyc.rr.com/taranto/presidents.htm].
53: ...arch 3]], [[1831]]). He was chairman of the Committee on the Judiciary (Twenty-first Congress). He w...
57: ...a Cabinet portfolio. He was chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations (Twenty-fourth through Twe...
68: ...tance" since the [[Supreme Court]] was about to settle it "speedily and finally."
70: ...de slavery in the territories. Much of Taney?s written judgment is widely interpreted as ''[[dicta]]''... - Guyana (12153 bytes)
13: | align=center colspan=2 | <small>''[[National motto]]: One People, One Nation, One Destiny''</small>
62: ...e British colony known as [[British Guiana]] in [[1831]].
64: ...olition of [[slavery]] in [[1834]] led to black settlement of urban areas and the importation of inden...
119: ... are the dominant religions in Guyana, with the latter two concentrated in the Indo-Guyanese community...
121: ...nce, as many as 10,000 Guyanese would leave and settle permanently in the [[United States]] alone ever... - Timeline of invention (28171 bytes)
10: ...60 KYA: [[Shipbuilding|Ships]] probably used by settlers of [[New Guinea]]
15: * 12 KYA: [[Pottery]] by [[Jomon]] in [[Japan]]
123: * [[1645]]: [[Vacuum pump]]: [[Otto von Guericke]]
136: ...1733]]: [[Flying shuttle]]: [[John Kay (Flying Shuttle)]]
143: * [[1769]]: [[Steam engine]]: [[James Watt]] - List of painters (54090 bytes)
3: {{compactTOC5}}
38: *[[Mariotto Albertinelli]] ([[1474]]-[[1515]])
102: *[[Jennifer Bartlett]] ([[1941]]-)
130: *[[Bernardo Bellotto]] ([[1721]]-[[1780]])
183: *[[Sandro Botticelli]] ([[1445]]-[[1510]]) - Timeline of United States history (1820-1859) (8457 bytes)
28: *[[1831]] - [[Nat Turner]]'s revolt
29: *[[1831]] - ''[[The Liberator]]'' begins publication
30: *[[1831]] - [[Cyrus McCormick]] invents the [[reaper]]
41: *[[1836]] - [[Battle of the Alamo]], [[Battle of San Jacinto]]
76: *[[1848]] - [[Gold]] discovered at [[Sutter's Mill]] in [[California]] - Timeline of events leading to the American Civil War (11837 bytes)
9: ... Compromise]] makes provisions for the future admittance of slave states and free states.
17: |valign=center|'''[[1831]]'''
20: ...ing importance of slave labor in the Southern [[cotton]] economy, the Nat Turner uprising, and the ris...
33: ...ion. [[John Quincy Adams]] leads an eight year battle against the gag rule, demonstrating how Slavery...
54: ... Debates center on whether slavery should be permitted in the newly gained Western territories. <br> - List of popes (77758 bytes)
25: ...[[Jesus]] from whom, according to {{bibleverse||Matthew|16:18-19|}}, he received the keys to the kingd...
1230: | <small>[[Cittࠤi Castello]], Umbria, Italy</small>
1393: | <small>Ottobuono [[Fieschi]]</small>
1449: | <small>Benedetto Caetani</small>
1603: | <small>Giovanni Battista Cybo</small> - Alfred Nobel (7332 bytes)
5: ...the second son, [[Ludvig Nobel|Ludvig Emmanuel]] (1831-1888), by whom it was greatly enlarged, and Alfre...
14: ...itroglycerin with another high explosive, [[gun-cotton]], and obtained a transparent, jelly-like subst...
16: ...troglycerin and gun-cotton, but the form of the latter which its inventors wished to use was the most ...
23: ...ite, is said to have made him decide to leave a better legacy to the world after his death.
37: *[http://www.nobel.se/nobel/alfred-nobel/index.html The... - Underground Railroad (17993 bytes)
2: ...aves]] in the [[19th century]] [[United States]] attempted to escape to [[free state]]s, or as far nor...
10: ...yond their immediate area ''(see [[Vigilance committee]])''. Many individual links were via family re...
23: ...horities went to the regular train station in an attempt to intercept the runaways, while Still was ab...
27: ...ilroad'' is alleged to have originated with the [[1831]] escape of Tice Davids from a Kentucky slaveowne...
33: ... star in a nearby [[Ursa Minor]] asterism, the "Little Dipper," which pointed the way due North, to fr...
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