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  1. Persepolis (15450 bytes)
    2: ... km northeast of [[Shiraz, Iran|Shiraz]], not far from where the small river Pulwar flows into the Kur...
    4: ...s, the ruins of Persepolis still inspire visitors from far and near.]]
    6: ...al buildings, all constructed of dark-grey marble from the adjacent mountain. The stones were laid wit...
    8: ...of these seven tombs were kings might be inferred from the sculptures, and one of those at ''Nakshi Ru...
    18: ...remote place in a difficult alpine region was far from convenient, and the real capitals were [[Susa]]...
  2. Ancient Greek theatre (7531 bytes)
    7: ... [[Dionysus]], the Greek god of [[fertility]] and wine. This tradition is probably accurate, since Athe...
    9: ... the Dionysia each year. The dithyrambs began as frenzied [[improvisation]]s. In the 600s BC, the poe...
    17: ...have complete plays that survive extant. All are from Athens. They are the tragic writers [[Aeschylu...
    21: ... Comedy|New Comedy]]. The only extant playwright from the period is [[Menander]]. One of New Comedy'...
    35: ...ee doors between the skene and the orchestra. In front of the skene there may have been a raised acti...
  3. Isabella of Jerusalem (7928 bytes)
    3: ...had received the town and territory of [[Nablus]] from her husband the king. Isabella grew up in the c...
    7: :''"[Stephanie] sent to Saladin bread and wine, sheep and cattle in celebration of her son's wed...
    9: ...d (though he had succeeded in having his children from that marriage legitimized), Isabella was throug...
    11: ...uld be adjudicated by the kings of [[England]], [[France]], and [[Germany]]. The selection would be de...
    19: ...land|Richard the Lion-Hearted]], a close ally and friend of Humphrey, who sent him to Tyre as his repr...
  4. Josephine Baker (5957 bytes)
    3: ...known as "The Black Venus." She became a [[France|French]] [[citizen]] in [[1937]].
    7: ...as adorned with a [[diamond]] collar. The leopard frequently escaped into the orchestra pit, where it ...
    9: ...e [[United States|U.S.]], she would have suffered from the [[racism|racial]] prejudices common to the ...
    13: ...isoned, she managed to excuse herself and escaped from the chalet through a laundry chute. After the w...
    15: Yet despite her popularity in France, she was never really able to obtain the same...
  5. Alanis Morissette (25762 bytes)
    6: Alanis's Surname "Morissette" is French in origin. Her [[1995]] international debut ...
    12: ...er early idols, and said over the intercom at the front gates: ''"Hi, I'm Alanis. I want to meet you o...
    23: ...he would later write about in songs such as "UR" (from the album ''[[Supposed Former Infatuation Junki...
    38: ...is''. The album attempted to move Morissette away from her debut album's dance-pop sound. However, ''N...
    42: ...to [[Nashville]] a few months later also proved unfruitful.
  6. Mary Magdalene (15420 bytes)
    12: ...and dismissed by the early church fathers. In the fragmentary text, the disciples ask questions of the...
    22: ...[Harvard Divinity School]], has observed, "The confrontation of Mary with Peter, a scenario also found...
    31: ...:10); although the Roman Catholic Church withdrew from this linkage at the [[Second Vatican Council]] ...
    33: ...ose critical scholars who are drawing conclusions from the canonic texts alone believe that the woman ...
    36: ...rance]]. Though her bones were scattered at the [[French Revolution]], her head is said to remain in h...
  7. Julia Child (8199 bytes)
    1: [[Image:Julia_child.jpg|frame|right|Julia Child holds up a [[Monkfish]].]]
    2: ...rench Cooking'' and the television series ''[[The French Chef]]'', which premiered in 1963.
    6: ...ood prepared by the family maid. After graduating from [[Smith College]] with a [[Bachelor of Arts]] d...
    10: ...formation Agency | U.S. Information Agency]] in [[France]].
    12: == Post-war France ==
  8. Apple (20408 bytes)
    16: ...]], and is one of the most widely cultivated tree fruits. Table apples are of the species ''M. domesti...
    27: ...ples, picked in late autumn and stored just above freezing have been an important food in [[Asia]] and...
    32: ... allow [[pesticide]]s to penetrate the top of the fruit), and popular flavor.
    34: ...around the world to preserve such local heirlooms from extinction.
    39: ...e]]s are typically too tart and astringent to eat fresh, but they give the beverage a rich flavor that...
  9. Pre-historic art (9744 bytes)
    7: ...recent find, [[the Mask of La Roche-Cotard]] in [[France]], now suggests that Neanderthal humans may h...
    9: The earliest [[figurine]] yet discovered come from between 500,000 and 300,000 BC, during the Midd...
    12: ...Patterns on utilitarian objects, like the paddles from [[Tybrind Vig]], [[Denmark]], are known as well...
    17: ...pomorphic figurines, often embellished by animals from the very beginning of the Neolithic discovered ...
    22: ...Western and Northern Europe, notably at Carnac, [[France]], at [[Skara Brae]] in the [[Orkney Islands]...
  10. Printing (4400 bytes)
    11: ...g the more sophisticated [[block printing]] dates from 868 AD (The ''[[Diamond Sutra]]'' of AD [[868]]...
    13: ... developed the use of raised and movable type and from the start used oil based inks.
    18: ...nhope]], [[George E. Clymer|George E. Clymer]], [[Friedrich Koenig|Koenig]] and others introduced new ...
    46: * [[Francysk Skaryna]], first [[Belarus]]ian printer
  11. Greek language (35285 bytes)
    15: ...ied in schools and universities in many countries from the [[Renaissance]] onwards.
    17: ... known world, it was spoken from [[Egypt]] to the fringes of [[India]]. After the [[Roman]] conquest o...
    21: *'''[[Modern Greek]]''': Steaming directly from [[Koine Greek]], '''Modern Greek''' can be trac...
    32: ... this is found in the [[Linear B]] tablets dating from [[1500 BC]]. The [[alphabet]] normally used, wa...
    44: ...Austria]], [[Bulgaria]], [[Canada]], [[Egypt]], [[France]], [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]], [[Germany]]...
  12. Thomas Jefferson (31127 bytes)
    18: ...nd an American [[statesman]], [[ambassador]] to [[France]], [[Political philosophy|political philosoph...
    23: ...0]], [[1720]]–[[March 31]], [[1776]]), both from families who had settled in [[Virginia]] for se...
    25: ...ch included Jefferson, [[John Adams]], [[Benjamin Franklin]], [[Roger Sherman]], and [[Robert R. Livin...
    27: ...[curriculum]] of which Jefferson also designed. [[Frank E. Grizzard]], Jr., a scholar at the Universit...
    30: ...at the layers of occupation, and draw conclusions from them.
  13. Australia (39438 bytes)
    28: established_dates=From the [[United Kingdom|UK]]:<br>[[1 January]] [[1...
    44: ...notes=<sup>1</sup>There are some minor variations from these three timezones, see [[Australian States ...
    50: ...island]], [[Boigu Island]], is about 5 kilometres from Papua New Guinea. This has led to a complicated...
    54: The name Australia derives from the [[Latin]] ''australis'', meaning ''southern...
    55: ...w of [[Port Jackson]], taken from the South Head, from ''A Voyage to Terra Australis''. [[Sydney]] was...
  14. South Africa (40100 bytes)
    1: ...pendent [[nation]], entirely surrounded by South African territory.
    3: ...as well as many white, coloured and Indian South Africans.
    5: ...the entire [[Africa]]n continent, with modern [[infrastructure]] common throughout the country.
    7: {{South Africa infobox}}
    9: South Africa has 11 official languages: [[Afrikaans]], [[English language|English]], [[Zulu lan...
  15. Portugal (61755 bytes)
    5: ... the country's early history, stemming as it does from the Roman name ''Portus Cale'', a possibly mixe...
    15: ...C]], several waves of [[Celts]] invaded Portugal from [[Central Europe]] and intermarried with local ...
    17: ...Portugal started from the south, where they found friendly natives, the [[Conii]]. Over decades, the R...
    25: ...s. From there they aimed to reconquer their lands from the [[Moors]] (mainly [[Berber]] with some [[Ar...
    27: ...r of the Iberian Peninsula, faced new competition from other regions. The lords of the cities of [[Coi...
  16. Spain (36498 bytes)
    1: ...e cities of [[Ceuta]] and [[Melilla]] in [[north Africa]], and a number of uninhabited islands on the ...
    58: ...in the sense that they are not known to have come from elsewhere), consisting of a number of separate ...
    68: ...a supplied the Roman Empire with food, olive oil, wine and metal. The emperors [[Trajan]], [[Hadrian]] a...
    70: ...s present languages, religion, and laws originate from this Roman period.
    73: ...frica. Much of Spain's distinctive art originates from this seven-hundred-year period, and many Arabic...
  17. Honey (11666 bytes)
    4: ... fluid produced by [[bee]]s and other [[insect]]s from the [[nectar]] of [[flower]]s. "The definition ...
    8: ...ure content is too low. Natural, raw honey varies from 14% to 18% moisture content. As long as the moi...
    17: *[[Fructose]]: 38%
    29: ...licacy]] for its unique flavour. [[Manuka]] honey from [[New Zealand]] is said by some to have more sp...
    31: ...ece]] is famous for [[wild thyme]] honey, as is [[France]] for [[lavender]] and [[Black locust|acacia]...
  18. Abydos, Egypt (9715 bytes)
    6: ...ew temple of [[Nectanebo I]] in the 30th dynasty. From [[Ptolemaic Period|Ptolemaic]] times the place ...
    10: ...ned the way" to the realm of the dead, increasing from the first dynasty to the time of the 12th dynas...
    14: ...uilt here on one site were nine or ten in number, from the 1st dynasty to the [[twenty-sixth dynasty o...
    19: ...was about 40 x 50 ft. inside, with stone gateways front and back, showing that it was of the processio...
    27: ...Caulfield, ''Temple of the Kings''); and probably from these led out the great Hypogeum for the celebr...
  19. Ancient Greece (23806 bytes)
    2: ...t are now [[Albania]], [[Bulgaria]], [[Egypt]], [[France]], [[Libya]], [[Romania]], [[Spain]], and [[U...
    4: ...izations, while Greek-speaking, were so different from later Greek cultures that they should be classe...
    14: [[Image:vcycladic.jpg|thumb|left|Marble statuette from the Cycladic islands, 3000 BC]]
    15: ...th century BC is a "[[Greek Dark Ages|dark age]]" from which no primary texts, and only scant archaeol...
    20: ..., where every island, valley and plain is cut off from its neighbours by the sea or mountain ranges.
  20. Ancient Rome (25155 bytes)
    1: ...vilization]] that existed in [[Europe]], [[North Africa]], and the [[Middle East]] between [[753 BC]] ...
    9: [[Image:Lupaegemelli.jpg|framed|right|The female wolf, feeding the baby twins...
    11: ...Palatine Hill]], approximately eighteen [[mile]]s from the [[Tyrrhenian Sea]] on the river [[Tiber]]. ...
    25: ... each other for power. Caesar emerged victorious from the resulting Civil War, and was made dictator ...
    27: ...ements ([[27 BC]] and [[23 BC]]) transformed Rome from a Republic to an Empire. His designated success...

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