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- Space exploration (14877 bytes)
6: ...f aircraft. The [[U.S. Space & Rocket Center]] museum in [[Huntsville, Alabama]] next to [[Redstone Ar...
15: ...st Rocket]] on a suborbital flight, the first amateur space flight. On [[June 21]], [[2004]], [[SpaceS...
30: ===European Space Agency===
31: The ''European Space Research Organisation'', also known a...
33: ...he Netherlands. The center is still a part of the European Space Agency, which has grown to be a much ... - Cave (10592 bytes)
40: ...]], and [[Antarctica]], but are found widely in [[Europe]], [[Asia]], and [[North America]].
76: {{Commons|Cave|Cave}} - Byzantine Empire (29975 bytes)
51: ...th century when French authors such as [[Montesquieu]] began to popularize it. Hieronymus himself was ...
88: ...eligion from the former imperial lands in western Europe, although the southern Byzantine provinces di...
92: ...zu]]) that emphasized stealth, surprise, swift maneuver and the marshalling of overwhelming force at t...
108: ...d, began to reestablish the army on the basis of feudal grants (''[[pronoia|pri]]'') and made sign...
112: ...antinople in [[1204]]. As a result a short-lived feudal kingdom was founded (the [[Latin Empire]]), an... - Castle (27805 bytes)
2: ..."castle" designations, relics of the [[feudalism|feudal]] age, often remained attached to the dwelling...
4: ...[[History of Japan|Japanese history]], where the feudal [[Daimyo]] inhabited them.
10: ...is can be seen by many of the typical features of European castles - e.g. portcullises, battlements an...
23: ==Medieval European castles==
46: ...nd was then familiar on the mainland of western [[Europe]]. - Tree (23723 bytes)
32: # [[Coast Douglas-fir]] ''Pseudotsuga menziesii'': '''100.3 m''', Brummit Creek,...
34: # [[Giant Sequoia]] ''Sequoiadendron giganteum'': '''93.6 m''', Redwood Mountain Grove, Califor...
35: ... [[Eucalyptus regnans|Australian Mountain-ash]] ''Eucalyptus regnans'': '''92.0 m''', Styx Valley, [[T...
49: # [[Giant Sequoia]] ''Sequoiadendron giganteum'': '''8.85 m''', [[General Grant tree]], [[Grant...
56: # [[Giant Sequoia]] ''Sequoiadendron giganteum'': '''1489 m�''', [[General Sherman tree]] - Carnivorous plant (44834 bytes)
142: a period of one to two weeks. Leaves can be reused three or four times before
236: ...re of both gives better growth than either alone. European bladderworts seem able to use either source...
449: {{Commons|Category:Carnivorous plants}} - Francis Bacon (16741 bytes)
25: ...period Bacon became acquainted with [[Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex]] (1567-1601), [[Elizabeth I ...
35: ...rerogative, while retaining the confidence of the Commons. In 1613, Bacon was finally able to become attorn...
45: ...fing it with snow, contracted a fatal case of [[pneumonia]]. He died at [[Highgate]]. He died on April...
47: ...d in 1597; ''In felicem memoriam Elizabethae'', a eulogy for the queen written in 1609; and various ph... - Socrates (7975 bytes)
37: {{commons|Socrates}} - Mars (27704 bytes)
27: ...ought to be seas, hence their names [[Mare Erythraeum]], [[Mare Sirenum]] and [[Aurorae Sinus]]. The l...
85: ...by the [[Soviet Union]], the [[United States]], [[Europe]], and [[Japan]] to study the planet's surfac...
89: In [[2003]], the [[European Space Agency|ESA]] launched the [[Mars Expr...
126: ...ite EETA79001-B, discovered in [[Antarctica]] in 1979. The rock may have been ejected from the same cra...
206: {{commons|Mars}} - Colonial America (32872 bytes)
8: ===Europe===
9: ...ntury|15th]] and [[16th century|16th]] centuries, Europe emerged from the [[Middle Ages]] and entered ...
11: ...attempts at exploration. Also, as the economy of Europe began to revive, it became clear that the fir...
13: ...d taken little interest in them, so as far as the Europeans were concerned, they were still free for t...
56: ...mmunity that would serve as an example for all of Europe and stimulate mass conversion to Puritanism. ... - Christianity (47078 bytes)
37: * via [[Greece]] and [[Rome]] to [[Europe]]
49: ...ynod of [[Seleucia]] in [[410]], the bishop of Seleucia was pronounced [[Catholic]] and replaced the P...
58: ...d a vigorous struggle for the hearts and minds of Europeans. Disputes between Roman Catholics and Prot...
60: ...the 18th century; they came to North America from Europe in much greater numbers in the late nineteent...
62: ...ristian-oriented nations, especially in [[Western Europe]], became more secular. Most [[communist]] st... - Allspice (3832 bytes)
3: <!-- If you add picture, put it in the commons with name Pimenta dioica.jpg -->
25: ... the 16th century. It was slowly introduced into Europe after that. It is still almost exclusively g... - Charles de Gaulle (41586 bytes)
31:
45: ...s his mother's side was a family of rich entrepreneurs from the industrial region of Lille in [[French...
52: ...by that war, namely by the use of tanks, fast manoeuvres and lack of trenches.
87:
89: ... maintained regular contact with past political lieutenants from wartime and RPF days, including sympa... - Tycho Brahe (17516 bytes)
12: ... Tractatus de Sphaera, [[Apianus]]' Cosmographia seu descriptio totius orbis and [[Regiomontanus]]' De...
22: ...uncle Jorgen Brahe, had already died in 1565 of pneumonia after rescuing [[Frederick II of Denmark]] f...
99: {{commons|Tycho Brahe}} - Thomas More (15893 bytes)
14: ... British House of Commons|Speaker of the House of Commons]]. He later served as high steward for the unive...
19: ...l man of letters in his communications with other European humanists. The humanistic project embraced...
27: ...tious social life of [[Christianity|Christian]] [[Europe]]an states with the perfectly orderly and rea... - French Revolution (36529 bytes)
13: * Resentment of the [[seigneurial system]] by peasants, wage-earners, and, to a...
42: ...state, now meeting as the ''Communes'' (English: "Commons"), proceed with verification of its own powers an...
53: ... of the military joined the mob; others remained neutral.
59: ... civil war within the kingdom and agitating for a European coalition against France.
63: ...eneral agrarian insurrection known as "la Grande Peur" (the Great Fear). - Stag Beetle (3702 bytes)
4: {{Taxobox_domain_entry | taxon = [[Eukaryote|Eukaryota]]}}
28: ... are [[Richmond Park]] and [[Wimbledon and Putney Commons|Wimbledon Common]]. - Brown Pelican (2615 bytes)
12: ...s occidentalis | author = [[Carolus Linnaeus|Linnaeus]] | date = 1766}}
28: *''Pelecanus occidentalis occidentalis'' Linnaeus, 1766
34: {{commons|Pelecanus occidentalis}} - Congress of the United States (41315 bytes)
17: ...e Canadian House of Commons, the British House of Commons, and the German [[Bundestag]], approximately 15 p...
155: In contrast to [[Europe]]an [[parliamentary system]]s, the selection ...
163: ...ently more democratic than one that does not. In European party systems legislators are beholden to t... - United States Senate (35505 bytes)
80: ...hich only the [[British House of Commons|House of Commons]] may originate such measures.
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