Search results
|
No page with that title exists You can create an article with this title or put up a request for it. Please search Wikipedia before creating an article to avoid duplicating an existing one, which may have a different name or spelling.
Showing below 19 results starting with #1.
View (previous 20) (next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).
No article title matches
Page text matches
- List of explorers (24013 bytes)
89: ...Red]], (c.950-1003), explored and colonized [[Greenland]]
90: ...ríksson]], (born 970), attempted to colonize [[Vinland]], discovered [[the Americas|America]]
131: ...ara Falls]] and the [[Saint Anthony Falls]] (the only [[waterfall]] on the [[Mississippi River|Mississ...
148: ...anish people|Danish]] explorer, Governor of [[Greenland]]
252: *[[Henry Morton Stanley]], (1841-1904), successfully searched for [[Dav... - List of people by name: Ac (3800 bytes)
6: *[[Bernard Accama|Accama, Bernard]] (1697-1756), Dutch painter - List of people by name: Ai (1915 bytes)
13: *[[Thomas Aikenhead|Aikenhead, Thomas]], (died 1697), hanged for blasphemy, near Edinburgh, Scotland. - Definitions of music (17609 bytes)
1: ...ings from "any euphonious and pleasing sound" to only a printed document showing how a piece is to be ...
8: ... mundana]], [[musica instrumentalis]]. Of those, only the last - musica instrumentalis - referred to m...
17: ...or Jarawa. Many other languages have terms which only partly cover what Europeans mean by the term "mu...
19: In Czech, ''hudba'' is instrumental music and only by implication vocal music. Some languages in We...
31: Another commonly held definition of music holds that music must b... - List of people by name: Q (4474 bytes)
27: ...[Johann Joachim Quantz|Quantz, Johann Joachim]], (1697-1773), composer
66: *[[Karen Ann Quinlan|Quinlan, Karen Ann]], (1954-1985) - List of painters (54090 bytes)
26: *[[Bernard Accama]] ([[1697]]-[[1756]])
230: *[[Canaletto]] ([[1697]]-[[1768]])
551: *[[William Hogarth]] ([[1697]]-[[1764]])
1115: *[[Ludomir Slendzinski]] ([[1697]]-[[1765]])
1146: *[[Andrzej Stech]] ([[1635]]-[[1697]]) - Timeline of United States pre-history (1600-1699) (5684 bytes)
66: *[[1689]]-[[King William's War]] (1689-1697), part of the wider [[War of the Grand Alliance]]...
71: *[[1697]]-The [[War of the Grand Alliance]] ends with the... - John Locke (14749 bytes)
3: ...fluence well into the [[The Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]] period. Locke has been placed in a gr...
37: ...essary; this can be created only by consent, and only to a commonwealth of laws. As law is sometimes ...
45: ...s would own 40 percent of the colony's land, and only a baron could be governor. When the crown took d...
60: ** (1697) ''A Second Vindication of the Reasonableness of ...
72: ...to wish you have one nowhere; if mortality, certainly, (and may it profit thee,) thou hast one here an... - Venice (22017 bytes)
10: ...dship of its mainland territories was relatively enlightened and the citizens of such towns as [[Berga...
12: ...ist|Winged Lion of St. Mark]], symbol of Venice. Only Venetian ships could efficiently transport the m...
14: ...self. The ''[[Cavalieri di San Marco]]'' was the only order of [[chivalry]] ever instituted in Venice,...
35: Early in the [[15th century]], as new mainland territories were expanded, the first standing ...
37: ... often experienced. A civilian commissioner (not unlike a [[commissar]]) accompanied each army to keep... - Maya civilization (25116 bytes)
18: ...ld, hence the name bestowed on this era. We have only hints of the advanced [[painting]] of the classi...
33: ...n, while interior space was entirely secondary. Only in the Late Post-Classic era did the great Maya ...
37: ...pliable enough to be worked with stone tools ... only hardening once removed from its bed. In additio...
41: ... as actual stone carvings used as a facade. Commonly, these would continue uninterrupted around an en...
48: These were commonly limestone platforms of typically less than four ... - William Dampier (7308 bytes)
16: ... journals as ''New Voyage Round the World'' in [[1697]] created interest at the British [[Admiralty]] a...
48: *''A New Voyage Round the World'', ([[1697]]) - William Kidd (4938 bytes)
6: ... least a French passenger aboard. Legally he was only allowed to take [[France|French]] and pirate ves...
8: On October 30, [[1697]] a dispute broke out with one William Moore. Gil...
10: ... pretended to be French. Kidd took his prize and only later realised that he had in fact captured an E...
12: ...and joined the pirates of the ''Mocha Frigate''. Only 13 of Kidd’s men remained loyal to him. - Benjamin Franklin (22881 bytes)
17: ...ptember 26]], [[1694]]), James ([[February 4]], [[1697]]), Sarah ([[July 9]], [[1699]]), Ebenezer ([[Sep...
25: ...as "A penny saved is a penny earned" are now commonly quoted every day by people all over the world.
27: ...ranklin felt that this [[enlightenment (concept)|enlightenment]] partly contributed to the American co...
42: ...'' is not ''created'' by rubbing substances, but only ''transferred'', so that "''the total quantity i...
52: ...hat Franklin was involved in the creation of not only the aforementioned first volunteer fire departme... - List of mathematicians (37424 bytes)
17: *[[Lars Ahlfors|Lars Valerian Ahlfors]] (Finland, [[1907]] - [[1996]])
443: *[[Ernst Leonard Lindel? (Finland, [[1870]] - [[1946]])
507: *[[Georg Mohr]] (Denmark, [[1640]] - [[1697]])
528: *[[Rolf Nevanlinna]] (Finland, [[1895]] - [[1980]])
555: *[[Paul Painlev靝 (France, [[1863]] - [[1933]]) - List of astronomers (40322 bytes)
375: ...er, 2nd Earl of Macclesfield]] ([[Britain]], c. [[1697]] – [[1764]])
437: *[[Liisi Oterma]] ([[Finland]], [[1915]] – [[2001]])
446: ...er, 2nd Earl of Macclesfield]] ([[Britain]], c. [[1697]] – [[1764]])
465: *[[John Stanley Plaskett]] ([[Canada]], [[1865]] – [[1941...
523: *[[Frederick Hanley Seares]] ([[United States|USA]], [[1873]] &ndas... - Knights Hospitaller (26158 bytes)
5: ...lemagne]], Emperor of the [[Holy Roman Empire]], enlarged Probus' hostel and added a library to it. Un...
27: Although they had only a small number of ships, they nevertheless quick...
43: ...d by the loss of its Priories throughout Europe. Only 10% of the Order's income came from Europe, with...
46: ...tes|United States of America]]. However, it was only recognized by the Sovereign Military Order of Ma...
66: ...e granted with [[extraterritoriality]]. However, unlike [[Vatican City]], SMOM has no sovereign territ... - History of Germany (53864 bytes)
50: ...-people and the Teutonic Order, moved into the thinly populated Slav territories east of the Oder ([[B...
104: ...d invaded and devastated the [[Palatinate]] (1688-1697). Louis XIV benefitted from the Empire's problems...
110: ... the nobility and citizenry, an "[[enlightenment|enlightened]] [[absolutism]]" was established in Prus...
151: ...ssia and [[Denmark]] over [[Schleswig]], which - unlike [[Holstein]] - was not part of the German Conf...
196: In 1888 Kaiser Wilhelm I died, followed only 99 days later by his son [[Friedrich III, German... - Germany in the Middle Ages (53864 bytes)
50: ...-people and the Teutonic Order, moved into the thinly populated Slav territories east of the Oder ([[B...
104: ...d invaded and devastated the [[Palatinate]] (1688-1697). Louis XIV benefitted from the Empire's problems...
110: ... the nobility and citizenry, an "[[enlightenment|enlightened]] [[absolutism]]" was established in Prus...
151: ...ssia and [[Denmark]] over [[Schleswig]], which - unlike [[Holstein]] - was not part of the German Conf...
196: In 1888 Kaiser Wilhelm I died, followed only 99 days later by his son [[Friedrich III, German... - Maya (24836 bytes)
18: ...ld, hence the name bestowed on this era. We have only hints of the advanced [[painting]] of the classi...
33: ...n, while interior space was entirely secondary. Only in the Late Post-Classic era did the great Maya ...
37: ...pliable enough to be worked with stone tools ... only hardening once removed from its bed. In additio...
41: ... as actual stone carvings used as a facade. Commonly, these would continue uninterrupted around an en...
48: These were commonly limestone platforms of typically less than four ...
View (previous 20) (next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).