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  1. History of China (45919 bytes)
    7: ...ages were founded; the most archaeologically significant of those was found at [[Banpo]], [[Xi'an]].
    14: ...gust Ones and the Five Emperors#The Five Emperors|Five Emperors]] (三皇五帝). ...
    22: ...tings. [[Anyang]] in modern day Henan has been confirmed as the last of the six capitals of the Shang ...
    28: ...C)|Zhou]] king until [[256 BC]], he was largely a figurehead and held little real power.
    30: ...ang Di|First Emperor]] (Shi Huangdi), forming the first Chinese empire under the [[Qin Dynasty]]. This...
  2. List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
    15: *[[Adam]], Biblical figure, first man
    34: *[[Abigail Adams|Adams, Abigail]], (1744-1818), [[First Lady of the United States]]
    41: ...ivil War General and president of the [[Union Pacific Railroad]]
    66: ...officer)|Adams, Samuel]], (1912-1942), US naval officer
    86: *[[Filippo Addis|Addis, Filippo]], (1884-1974), writer
  3. Elisabeth Domitien (1229 bytes)
    1: '''Elisabeth Domitien''' (born [[1925]] – died [[26 April]] [[2005]]) was prime m...
    3: ... appointing Domitien to the position. She was the first woman to serve as prime minister of an [[Afric...
    5: ...ning to politics, though she remained a prominent figure, both as a former politician and as a busines...
  4. Margaret Thatcher (46377 bytes)
    5: |'''Period in Office:'''
    16: |[[13 October]] [[1925]]
    27: ...servative Party (UK)|Conservative Party]] and the figurehead of a political philosophy that became kno...
    33: Her popularity finally declined when she replaced the unpopular [[R...
    36: ...cal politics, serving as an [[Alderman]] (while officially described as '[[Whig|Liberal]] Independent'...
  5. Emma Goldman (12210 bytes)
    3: ... of anarchism in the US and Europe throughout the first half of the twentieth century. She immigrated ...
    13: ... with [[Alexander Berkman]], who was an important figure of the anarchist movement in the United State...
    21: .... After undergoing intense cross-examining in confinement for several weeks, they were released due t...
    32: ...y may even have shared an apartment (see also the film [[Reds]]).
    38: ...n]] to support the [[Spanish Revolution]] and the fight against [[Franco]]'s [[fascism]], known as the...
  6. Anna Akhmatova (2156 bytes)
    1: ...] of Anna Andreevna Gorenko, one of the most significant Russian [[Acmeist poetry|Acmeist poets]].
    3: ...nd memory, the fate of creative women, and the difficulties of living and writing in the shadow of [[S...
    11: ...ively silenced, unable to publish poetry, between 1925 and 1952 (except for an interval between [[1940]]...
  7. Isak Dinesen (2959 bytes)
    5: ...erving with the [[Canada|Canadian]] army in the [[First World War]].
    7: ...returned to Denmark. The divorce was finalized in 1925. Karen Blixen remained in Kenya and continued to ...
  8. Ayn Rand (18001 bytes)
    11: ...nd ''[[Atlas Shrugged]]''. Her philosophy and her fiction both emphasize, above all, her concepts of [...
    13: ...s a right to exist for his own sake, neither sacrificing self to others nor others to self; and
    19: ...irst name is said to have come from the name of a Finnish writer whom she had not read, but whose name...
    22: ...[[naturalized citizen]] of the United States. Her first literary success came with the sale of her scr...
    24: ...an]] government under [[Benito Mussolini]]. These films were re-edited into a new version which was ap...
  9. Nathalie Sarraute (1197 bytes)
    4: ...aute, a fellow lawyer. In [[1932]], she wrote her first book called "Tropismes", published in [[1939]]...
    6: ...[[Michel Butor]] and [[Claude Simon]], one of the figures most associated with the trend of the [[nouv...
  10. Gertrude Stein (13569 bytes)
    15: She and her brother compiled one of the first collections of Cubist art. She owned early wor...
    21: ...as four foot eleven inches tall, and Gertrude was five foot one inch (Grahn 1989).
    23: ...ent, but by the end she did not, having witnessed firsthand the hardship it brought to the peasants." ...
    50: ... in her work with words used the entire text as a field in which every element mattered as much as any...
    52: ...Using the idea of everything belonging to a whole field and mattering equally, as well as each being h...
  11. Marina Tsvetaeva (21885 bytes)
    8: ..., which is now known as the [[Pushkin Museum]] of Fine Arts. Tsvetaeva's mother, Maria Alexandrovna Me...
    10: ...family. He was also still deeply in love with his first wife; he would never get over her. She, for he...
    12: ...bourgeois Muscovite life, Marina was able for the first time to run free, climb cliffs, and vent her i...
    14: ...ksandr Blok]] were capable of generating. Her own first collection of poems, ''Evening Album'', was se...
    18: ...conducted an affair with the [[lesbian]] poet [[Sofia Parnok]], who was 9 years older than Tsvetaeva. ...
  12. Virginia Woolf (9482 bytes)
    3: ...tween the [[world war]]s, Woolf was a significant figure in London literary society and a member of th...
    7: ...], following the death of her mother, she had the first of several [[nervous breakdown]]s. She later i...
    9: ...[[civil servant]] and [[political theorist]]. Her first novel, ''The Voyage Out'', was published in [[...
    13: ... ambitious work, "Between the Acts" sums and magnifies Woolf's chief preoccupations: transformation of...
    15: ...ven me the greatest possible happiness... I can't fight it any longer, I know that I am spoiling your ...
  13. Margaret Mead (11387 bytes)
    5: ... culture. (Source: ''The Columbia Encyclopedia'', Fifth Edition, 1993.)
    7: ... public to read and learn from her works--remains firm.
    12: ...Mead's advisor, [[Franz Boas]], wrote of its significance that
    13: ...onstitutes courtesy, modesty, good manners, and definite ethical standards is not universal. It is in...
    22: ...expected, this book upset many Westerners when it first appeared in 1928. Many American readers felt s...
  14. Josephine Baker (5957 bytes)
    1: ...e.JPG|thumb|Josephine Baker in a [[burlesque]] outfit]]
    7: On [[October 2]], [[1925]], she opened in [[Paris]] at the Th颴re [[Champ...
    9: ...al star, Baker also starred in several successful films, among them ''Zouzou'' (1934) and ''Princesse ...
    11: ... and public persona into a sophisticated cultural figure. (The marriage was reportedly a publicity stu...
    19: ... show opened to rave reviews, but Baker never benefited from it. She died of a [[cerebral hemorrhage]]...
  15. Aimee Semple McPherson (13395 bytes)
    13: ...reafter, the two embarked on an evangelical tour, first to [[Europe]] and then to [[China]], where the...
    25: ...me frustrated with the situation, and by 1918 had filed for separation. His petition for divorce, cit...
    27: ...f 1918 to 1922 as itinerant Pentecostal preacher, finally settling with her mother in [[Los Angeles, C...
    33: ...nday]], McPherson was less a [[fire and brimstone|fire-and-brimstone]] preacher than one to endorse ch...
    35: ... on [[February 6]], [[1924]], she also became the first woman to be granted a broadcast license by the...
  16. Lucille Ball (12427 bytes)
    4: ...ised by her working mother and grandparents. In [[1925]], after a romance with a local bad boy (Johnny),...
    5: ...ering the spinal cord, due to a .22 caliber rifle firing with Warner in the rifle's path. Her grandfat...
    7: ...he [[1940s]], but never achieved great success in films. She was known in many Hollywood circles as "t...
    9: ...Cuban bandleader [[Desi Arnaz]] while filming the film version of the [[Rodgers and Hart]] stage hit '...
    20: ...dated her show), and was among the first stars to film before a live audience.
  17. Tallulah Bankhead (6331 bytes)
    6: ... her move to New York. She quickly won bit parts, first appearing in a non-speaking role in The Squab ...
    12: ...[Hollywood]] success eluded her in her first four films of the 30s. Critics agree that her acting was ...
    14: ...vertheless, [[David O. Selznick]] called her the "first choice among established stars" to play [[Scar...
    16: ...onders if the cynical Bankhead could have played "Fiddle-Dee-Dee" Scarlett with anything approaching a...
    20: ...performance is widely acknowledged as her best on film, and won her the New York Screen Critics Award....
  18. Greta Garbo (9957 bytes)
    8: ...part for the movie ''Peter The Tramp'' ([[1920 in film|1920]]).
    10: ...n a major role in ''G? Berlings Saga'' ([[1924 in film|1924]]) (English: ''The Story of G? Berling'')....
    12: ...ationship came to an end as her fame grew. He was fired by MGM and returned to [[Sweden]] in [[1928]],...
    17: ...]]) and ''[[Love (1927 movie)|Love]]'' ([[1927 in film|1927]]). The latter two she starred in with the...
    19: ...he first time in ''[[Anna Christie]]'' ([[1930 in film|1930]]), which was publicized with the slogan "...
  19. Suzanne Lenglen (11495 bytes)
    1: ...iva]]'' or ''[[prima donna]]'' of tennis, was the first female tennis player to become an internationa...
    3: ... the first female tennis celebrity and one of the first international female sport stars, named ''La D...
    8: ...r her to compete in tennis and gain strength. Her first try at the game was in 1910, when she played o...
    10: ...], was only open to members of French clubs until 1925.) She lost to reigning champion [[Marguerite Broq...
    14: ...g in 10–8, 4–6, 9–7 to take her first Grand Slam victory.
  20. Parathyroid gland (1913 bytes)
    14: ... Since hyperparathyroidism was first described in 1925, the symptoms have become known as "[[moan]]s, [[...

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