Search results
|
Showing below up to 20 results starting with #1.
View (previous 20) (next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).
No article title matches
Page text matches
- List of people by name: Ab (7347 bytes)
36: ...Edwin Abbott Abbott|Abbott, Edwin Abbott]], (1838-1926), British schoolmaster & theologian
113: *[[Luis Abreu|Abreu, Luis]], actor - List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
5: *[[Adachi Hatazo]], (1890-1947), Lieutenant general and Japanese commander in [[New Gui...
26: *[[Valdas Adamkus|Adamkus, Valdas]], (born 1926), Lithuanian president
83: *[[Fleur Adcock|Adcock, Fleur]], (born 1934), poet - Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom (35966 bytes)
7: ...yled '''''HM The Queen''''' ( born [[21 April]] [[1926]]) is the [[Queen regnant]] and [[head of state]]...
9: ...e is the longest serving current Head of State in Europe, The Americas, and [[Australasia|Australasia]...
15: ...eet in [[Mayfair]], [[London]] on [[21 April]], [[1926]]. Her father was HRH [[George VI of the United K...
33: ...ce|Greek]] throne and was simply referred to as Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten before being created [[D...
48: **[[Princess Eugenie of York|HRH Princess Eugenie of York]] (born [[23 March]] [[1990]]) - Mary of Teck (14662 bytes)
1: ...ette of Bond Street, London. Copyright [[V&A]] Museum]]
11: ...rt gallery|art galleries]], [[church]]es and [[museum]]s.
17: ...mother. However, Prince Albert Victor died of [[pneumonia]] six weeks later.
81: ...ueen Mary's dollshouse]] was created for her in [[1926]]. - Constance Georgine, Countess Markiewicz (3360 bytes)
14: ...and joined [[Fianna Fᩬ]] on its foundation in [[1926]]. She was not elected in the [[Irish_general_ele... - Margaret Sanger (12025 bytes)
2: ...rth control. She was also a fervent believer in [[eugenics]].
9: ...rth control information by mail. Sanger fled to [[Europe]] to escape prosecution. However, the followi...
17: ...ewly available [[birth control pill]]. She toured Europe, Africa, and Asia, lecturing and helping to e...
21: ...the New Race'' (1920), ''Happiness in Marriage'' (1926), and an autobiography (1938).
29: ...human sexuality place her squarely in the pre-[[Freud]]ian 19th century. Birth control, it would appea... - Mary Cassatt (9047 bytes)
2: ...t''' ([[May 22]], [[1844]] – [[June 14]], [[1926]]) was an [[United States|American]] painter.
4: ...10 years old, she visited many of the capitals of Europe, including [[London]], [[Paris]], and [[Berli...
8: ...aintings in Italy, after which she traveled about Europe.
10: ...[[1872]], after studying in the major European museums, her style matured, and in Paris, she studied w...
20: ...([[1880]]). [[Mary Cassatt]]. Oil on canvas. [[Museum of Fine Arts, Boston]].]] - Grazia Deledda (304 bytes)
1: ...rks won her a [[Nobel Prize for Literature]] in [[1926]]. - Isak Dinesen (2959 bytes)
9: ...el entitled ''The Angelic Avengers'', under the pseudonym of ''Pierre Andrezel''. She was awarded the...
18: * ''The Revenge of Truth'' (1926, published in Denmark) - Ayn Rand (18001 bytes)
19: ...he arrived in the [[United States]] in February [[1926]], at the age of twenty-one. After a brief stay w...
60: ...d. Peikoff expelled Kelley from his movement, whereupon Kelley founded The Institute for Objectivist S... - Marina Tsvetaeva (21885 bytes)
8: ...II Museum, which is now known as the [[Pushkin Museum]] of Fine Arts. Tsvetaeva's mother, Maria Alexan...
18: ...me year as her father's project, the [[Pushkin Museum]] of Fine Arts was ceremonially opened, attended...
20: ...my]], and Marina returned to Moscow hoping to be reunited with her husband. She was trapped in Moscow ...
26: ...svetaeva and Alya left the Soviet Union and were reunited with Efron in [[Berlin]]. In Berlin, she pub...
36: ...involved with the NKDV. [[World War II]] had made Europe as unsafe and hostile as Russia. Tsvetaeva fe... - Bessie Coleman (4340 bytes)
1: ...Bess" ([[January 26]], [[1892]] - [[April 30]], [[1926]]) was the first [[African American]] woman to be...
16: On [[April 30]], [[1926]], Coleman was preparing for an airshow, with her... - Margaret Mead (11387 bytes)
5: ...Polynesia]]. In 1926 Mead joined the American Museum of Natural History, New York City, as assistant ...
16: ... She found that it did. (See pp. 6-7, American Museum of Natural History edition of 1973.) - Helen Sawyer Hogg (1921 bytes)
5: A [[1926]] graduate of [[Mount Holyoke College]], after gr... - Josephine Baker (5957 bytes)
7: ...ally naked on stage. After a successful tour of [[Europe]], she returned to [[France]], where she star...
11: ...me she also scored her greatest song hit "''J'ai deux amours''" (1931) and became a muse for contempor...
17: ...another expatriate American entertainer living in Europe.
21: ... Baker (1921, divorced), Giuseppe Pepito Abatino (1926, publicity stunt, not legally binding), French su... - Bonnie and Clyde (17385 bytes)
9: ...he married [[Roy Thornton]] on [[September 25]] [[1926]], but the pairing was short-lived. Noted for hom...
15: ... farming family. Clyde was first arrested in late 1926, after running when police confronted him over a ... - Aimee Semple McPherson (13395 bytes)
13: ...e two embarked on an evangelical tour, first to [[Europe]] and then to [[China]], where they arrived i...
29: ...lpit]] ministry were rare—those who wore makeup and jewelry in the pulpit, nonexistent. McPhers...
31: ...aith healing]] into her sermons, and keeping a museum of crutches, wheelchairs and so forth as demonst...
51: On [[May 18]], [[1926]], McPherson went to [[Venice Beach, California|V...
75: ...se by paying $5,000. While McPherson was away in Europe, she was incensed to discover Hutton was bill... - Maya Deren (3661 bytes)
14: ...ren allegedly appeared to poet [[James Merrill]] (1926-1995) and his partner [[David Jackson]] (''?''-20... - Leni Riefenstahl (8095 bytes)
29: ...rkultur'' (''[[Ways to Strength and Beauty]]'', [[1926]])
30: ...er Heilige Berg]]'' (''[[The Holy Mountain]]'', [[1926]])
57: ...y]] ([[Picador]] Reprint edition, 1995, ISBN 0312119267) - Tallulah Bankhead (6331 bytes)
26: Tallulah Bankhead died in New York City of [[pneumonia]] arising from [[influenza]], complicated fu...
36: ...r through gauze. You should shoot me through linoleum. (Referring to Shirley Temple)
83: *1926 [[Scotch Mist]]
84: *1926 [[They Knew What They Wanted]]
85: *1926 [[The Gold Diggers]]
View (previous 20) (next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).