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- List of U.S. state capitals (5230 bytes)
35: | [[Delaware]]
36: | [[Dover, Delaware|Dover]]
56: | [[Springfield, Illinois|Springfield]]
108: | [[Helena, Montana|Helena]]
149: | [[1914]] — [[1917]] - List of explorers (24013 bytes)
1: ...plorers]], [[astronaut]], [[conquistador]], [[travelogue]], the [[History of Science and Technology]] ...
14: *[[Charles Albanel]] (1616-1696), Canada
22: *[[Pêro de Barcelos]] ([[15th century]]/[[16th century]] [[Portugue...
25: *[[Samuel Baker]], Africa
30: ...er]] Muslim, visited [[Mecca]] several times, travelled to [[Central Asia]], [[East Africa]], [[China]... - November 4 (10686 bytes)
7: * [[1576]] - [[Eighty Years' War]]: In [[Belgium]], [[Spain]] captures [[Antwerp (city)|Antwer...
14: ...d States Democratic Party|Democrat]] [[Grover Cleveland]] defeats [[United States Republican Party|Rep...
15: * [[1889]] - [[Menelik II of Ethiopia|Menelek of Shoa]] obtains the allegiance of a large maj...
16: ...lliam Street]] and [[Stockwell tube station|Stockwell]].
19: ... 40,000 [[sailor]]s take over the [[port]] in [[Kiel]]. - List of people by name: Ab (7347 bytes)
9: *[[Abati]] ''aka'' Niccolo Dell'Abbato, (1512-1571), artist
17: ...e|Abbadie, Antoine Thomson d']], (1810-1897), traveler
22: *[[Khwaja Ahmad Abbas|Abbas, Khwaja Ahmad]], (1914-1987), film director
34: *[[Dimebag Darrell|Abbott, Darrell]], (1966-2004), US musician
49: *[[Abd-el-Aziz IV]], (1880-), sultan of Morocco - Alexandra Kollontai (3203 bytes)
1: ...m [[1914]] on as a [[Bolshevik]]. She was effectively exiled by [[Stalin]], who sent her abroad as a d...
7: ...ized later for [[socialist feminism]]. The Zhenodtel was eventually closed by [[Stalin]] in [[1930]].
11: ...Kollontai was more or less totally politically sidelined.
13: ...[[Sweden]]. She was also a member of the Soviet delegation to the [[League of Nations]]. She died in...
15: ...overnment policy or operations and so was effectively [[exile]]d. - Rosa Luxemburg (23905 bytes)
2: ...my and freelance right-wing [[militia]]s collectively called the [[Freikorps]], which were sent in by ...
6: ...child of the [[Jew]]ish wood trader/timber trader Eliasz Luxemburg III and his wife Line (maiden name:...
14: ...ndependent Poland. Luxemburg denied the right of self-determination for nations under [[socialism]], w...
19: ...aim was to improve the number of seats the party held in the [[Reichstag]].
25: Nonetheless, Luxemburg kept up her political activities; i... - Emmeline Pankhurst (1950 bytes)
1: [[Image:Emmeline_Pankhurst.jpg|frame|Emmeline Pankhurst]]
3: ...truggle for votes for women in the period immediately preceding [[World War I]].
5: ... by her daughters, [[Christabel Pankhurst|Christabel]] and [[Sylvia Pankhurst|Sylvia]], both of whom w...
7: ...tobiography, ''My Own Story'', was published in [[1914]]. She died ten years after seeing her most arde... - Margaret Sanger (12025 bytes)
2: ... access to birth control. She was also a fervent believer in [[eugenics]].
9: In 1914, Sanger launched ''The Woman Rebel'', a newspaper advocating birth control. She also...
11: ...]], but also acknowledged the reality of sexual feelings in adolescents. It was followed in 1917 by ''...
13: ...on was legalized in many states. In 1927, Sanger helped organize the first World Population Conference...
15: ...l News''. From 1939 to 1942, she was an honorary delegate of the Birth Control Federation of America. ... - Mary Cassatt (9047 bytes)
4: ... that valued education. Her parents believed travel was a way to learn, and before she was 10 years o...
6: ...1861-1865). Tired of patronizing instructors and fellow male students, and the slow pace of her course...
8: ...copies of paintings in Italy, after which she traveled about Europe.
14: ...dow, though, she knew she was not alone in her rebellion against the Salon. "I used to go and flatten ...
18: ... painting to care for her mother and sister, who fell ill after moving to Paris in [[1877]]. Her siste... - Isak Dinesen (2959 bytes)
7: ...ated a [[coffee]] plantation. After several infidelities on the husband's part, the couple separated ...
9: ...drezel''. She was awarded the [[Tagea Brandt Rejselegat]] in [[1939]].
22: * ''The Angelic Avengers'' (1947)
30: * ''Letters from Africa, 1914-1931'' (posthumous 1981, USA)
34: ...Blixen|Asteroid 3318 Blixen]], named after the novelist - Marguerite Duras (1799 bytes)
3: '''Marguerite Donnadieu''' ([[April 4]], [[1914]] - [[March 3]], [[1996]]), better known as '''Ma...
7: ...er best-selling, ostensibly [[Autobiographical novel|autobiographical work]] ''[[L'Amant]]'' ([[1984]]...
9: ... to, rather than tell, a story over images whose relation to what is said may be more-or-less tangenti... - Nina Hamnett (3501 bytes)
3: ...the [[London School of Art]] until [[1910]]. In [[1914]] she went to the [[Montparnasse]] Quarter in [[P...
5: ...'' where the man at the next table introduced himself as "Modigliani, painter and Jew". In addition to...
7: ... I]] including at the Royal Academy in London as well as the ''[[Salon d'Automne]]'' in Paris. Back in...
13: ...wn, [[Augustus John]], and later another [[Wales|Welshman]], the poet [[Dylan Thomas]].
15: ... unsuccessfully sued her and the publisher for libel over allegations of Black Magic made in her book.... - Georgia O'Keeffe (2572 bytes)
6: ...in the public schools in [[Amarillo, Texas]] in [[1914]]. In [[1916]] started teaching at [[Columbia Col...
10: .... Over the next few years O'Keeffe and Stieglitz fell in love, and Stieglitz and his wife divorced. In...
12: ...d often in ill health, was uncomfortable with travel. Her trips west gave her the solitude she require... - Gertrude Stein (13569 bytes)
1: ...eminist]], [[playwright]], and catalyst in the development of modern art and literature, who spent mos...
13: ... was supported by a stipend from her brother Michael's business.
19: ...rge circle of friends and tirelessly promoted herself. Her judgments in literature and art were highly...
21: ...ving the two "wives" to chat. Alice was four foot eleven inches tall, and Gertrude was five foot one i...
23: ...rian, socially was more liberal than not, with developed individualism coupled with democratic values ... - Nancy Harkness Love (1763 bytes)
1: '''Nancy Harkness Love''' ([[February 14]], [[1914]] - [[October 22]], [[1976]]) was an [[United Sta...
11: ...stang]], a [[C-54]], a [[North American B-25 Mitchell]], and along with [[Betty Gillies]], a [[B-17]].... - Marina Tsvetaeva (21885 bytes)
8: ...a's imagination, and to cause her to identify herself with the Polish aristocracy.)
10: ...ly full sister, Anastasia, was born in 1894. Quarrels between the children were frequent and occasiona...
12: ...anges in school, and during the course of her travels she acquired Italian, French and German language...
14: ...irst collection of poems, ''Evening Album'', was self-published in [[1910]]. It attracted the attentio...
16: ...t Akhmatova until the 1940s. Describing the Koktebel community, the ''魩gr駧 [[Viktoria Schweitzer]]... - Suzanne Valadon (4068 bytes)
8: ...rveed and learned the artists' techniques. She modeled for artists [[Edgar Degas]], [[Henri de Toulous...
12: ...Maurice Utrillo]], he became one of Montmartre's well known artists.
16: ...'The Bath''. ([[1908]]). [[Suzanne Valadon]]. Pastel. 60x49 cm. Grenoble: [[Mus饠des Beaux Arts]].]]
18: ...leaving him, he said, with "nothing but an icy loneliness that fills the head with emptiness and the h...
26: ... painter, [[Andr頕tter]]. She married Utter in [[1914]], but the marriage also did not last. - Sarah Bernhardt (3531 bytes)
4: ...cated in French Catholic convents. To support herself, she combined the career of an actress with that...
6: ... Europe and in the [[United States]]. She soon developed a reputation as a serious dramatic actress, e...
8: ...ng, painting and sculpting herself, as well as modelling for [[Antonio de La Gandara]]. She was also t...
10: ...ath in 1889 at age 34, was quickly collapsed, largely due to the young actor's dependence on morphine.
12: ... in all. The latter included ''Sarah Bernhardt ࠂelle-Isle'' ([[1912]]), a film about her daily life ... - May Irwin (2858 bytes)
4: Born '''Ada May Campbell''', her father died when she was 13 years old an...
6: ...In 1886 her husband of eight years, Frederick W. Keller, passed away unexpectedly.
8: ...1890s, May Irwin had married a second time and developed her career into that of a leading [[vaudevill...
10: ...ohan]]. In 1907 she married her manager, Kurt Eisfeldt, the same year she began making records for [[R...
12: ... was one of America's most beloved performers. In 1914, she made her second [[silent film]] appearance, ... - Suzanne Lenglen (11495 bytes)
1: ... female tennis player to become an international celebrity.]]
3: ...setting athlete, she was the first female tennis celebrity and one of the first international female s...
10: ...e won the International Clay Court Championships held at [[Sainte-Claude]], turning 15 during the tour...
14: The French championships were not held again until [[1920 in sports|1920]], but the [[W...
18: ...in the women's doubles semi-final (playing with [[Elisabeth d'Ayen]]), and won the bronze medal after ...
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