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  1. Rio de Janeiro (14538 bytes)
    19: ...than farther [[Salvador da Bahia|Salvador]]. In [[1763]], the colonial administration in Portuguese Amer...
    21: ...pe. Since there was no physical space nor urban structure to accommodate hundreds of noblemen who arri...
    54: ...arra da Tijuca, JacarepaguᬠCampo Grande, Santa Cruz and Bangu. Barra da Tijuca remains an area of ac...
    58: ...hich is currently experiencing a wave of new construction. High rise apartments and sprawling shopping...
    63: ...equent. The favelas are troubled by widespread [[drug]] related crime and [[gang]] warfare and other p...
  2. List of people by name: Ac (3800 bytes)
    33: ... Ackermann|Ackermann, Georg Christian Benedict]] (1763-1833)
    45: *[[Rudolph Ackermann|Ackermann, Rudolph]] (1764-1834)
  3. Maria Theresa of Austria (8450 bytes)
    1: ...tria (often only known as Empress Maria Theresa), ruler of the [[Habsburg Empire]] from [[1740]]-[[178...
    4: ...tedly one of the most powerful women of her time, ruling over most of central Europe.
    12: ...). [[Heiress-presumptive]] to the title [[List of rulers of Austria|Archduchess of Austria]], [[King o...
    14: ...). [[Heiress-presumptive]] to the title [[List of rulers of Austria|Archduchess of Austria]], [[King o...
    15: ...ng issue. [[Holy Roman Emperor]]: 1765; [[List of rulers of Austria|Archduke of Austria]], [[King of H...
  4. Middle Kingdom of Egypt (5374 bytes)
    10: ...f the government. This proved the worth of the co-rulership as the new king would have acquired useful...
    20: ... [[Amenemhat IV]] ruled 10 years ([[1773 BC]] - [[1763 BC]]) before dying prematurely.
    22: ...at IV briefly reigned as Queen [[Sobekneferu]] ([[1763 BC]] - [[1759 BC]]). As she apparently had no hei...
    24: ...most fabulous of [[Ancient Egypt|Egyptian]] [[papyrus|papyri]]:
    26: ...[1800 BC]] - [[Timeline of mathematics|Berlin Papyrus]]
  5. Conventional Egyptian chronology (10774 bytes)
    5: This conventional [[chronology]] of the [[Pharaoh|rulers]] of [[History of Egypt|ancient Egypt]], taki...
    7: ...en dates shown here and in articles on particular rulers. Often there are also several possible spelli...
    74: *Huni (Horus Qahedjet ?)
    77: *[[Sneferu]] 2575-2551
    107: ...istorian [[Manetho]], this is a group of 70 kings ruling 70 days: there is no evidence for this - it m...
  6. Canada (35540 bytes)
    6: ...the world and the second largest in area (after [[Russia]]). Bordering the [[United States]], its terr...
    18: ...uage of [[Quebec]] and is widely spoken in [[New Brunswick]].
    46: ...align=left|[[New Brunswick]]||[[Fredericton, New Brunswick|Fredericton]]
    90: ... was left of [[Acadia]] in the [[Treaty of Paris (1763)]].
    92: ...e Loyalists, Britain created the colony of [[New Brunswick]] in [[1784]] and divided Quebec into [[Low...
  7. Saint Vincent and the Grenadines (8955 bytes)
    59: ...ntil 1796, when General Sir [[Ralph Abercromby]] crushed a revolt fomented by the French radical Victo...
    63: From 1763 until independence, St. Vincent passed through va...
    67: ...conomy deteriorated. In April 1979, La Soufriere erupted again. Although no one was killed, thousands ...
    69: ''See'' [[Treaty of Paris (1763)]]
    91: ...as been stimulated by strong activity in the construction sector and an improvement in tourism. There ...
  8. James Watt (5070 bytes)
    9: * [[1754]]: Learned the trade of mathematical-instrument making in [[London]] before returning to [[Gl...
    10: * [[1763]]: Repaired a [[Thomas Newcomen|Newcomen]] [[stea...
  9. Delaware (15006 bytes)
    11: Governor = [[Ruth Ann Minner]] |
    44: ... [[Charles Mason]] and [[Jeremiah Dixon]] between 1763 and 1767. Part of the Line now forms the east-wes...
    46: ...hirteen colonies]] which revolted against British rule in the [[American Revolution]]. After the Revo...
    50: ... Civil War. Delaware ratified the amendment on February 12, 1901--40 years after [[Abraham Lincoln|Lin...
    56: The present governor of Delaware is [[Ruth Ann Minner]] (Democrat). The lieutenant govern...
  10. Wisconsin (18812 bytes)
    47: ... explorer. The French controlled the area until [[1763]], when it was ceded to the British.
    53: ...e drawn out of Wisconsin by the [[California Gold Rush]]. This period of mining before and during the ...
    79: ...es. In the southwest, the [[Western Upland]] is a rugged landscape with a mix of forest and farmland.
    83: ...o a mistaken impression that it is an exclusively rural state. In fact Wisconsin contains cities and t...
  11. Vermont (39851 bytes)
    38: ...for its scenery, [[dairy]] products and [[maple syrup]], Vermont has long been known for its [[Liberal...
    46: ...[tree-line|timberline]], form a north-south spine running the most of the length of the state, slightl...
    50: ...rs. The northern part of the state, including the rural northeastern section (dubbed the "[[Northeast ...
    66: In [[1731]], the French arrived. Here they constructed a small temporary wooden stockade (Fort de Pi...
    68: ...tlement was established in [[1724]] with the construction of [[Fort Dummer]] in Vermont's far southeas...
  12. Thirteen Colonies (4707 bytes)
    10: ... (the division into three regions is a later construct of historians):
    35: * [[Nova Scotia]] (including present day [[New Brunswick]])
    40: ...area of the 13 colonies after the Proclamation of 1763. (Map produced by U.S. Dept. of Interior.)]]
  13. French and Indian War (5652 bytes)
    1: ...e for the decisive nine-year conflict ([[1754]]-[[1763]]) in [[North America]] between [[Great Britain]]...
    17: ...he [[1763 Treaty of Paris]] on [[February 10]], [[1763]]. France agreed to cede Canada to Britain, prefe...
    19: ...ts imposed by the [[British Royal Proclamation of 1763]] in the newly acquired French territories in the...
    43: ...25]], [[1758]] with the British occupation of the ruins of [[Fort Duquesne]])
  14. Seven Years' War (11256 bytes)
    1: ...ate)|Hanover]] against [[France]], [[Austria]], [[Russia]], [[Sweden]], and [[Saxony]]. [[Spain]] and ...
    3: ...[[Europe]]an portions of the conflict (1756–1763), not the nine-year North American conflict or th...
    5: ... [[2nd Carnatic War]] while the fighting between Prussia and Austria is called the [[Silesian Wars|3rd...
    8: ...]]. During that conflict, King [[Frederick II of Prussia]] had gained the rich province of [[Silesia]]...
    10: ... continental Europe and thus allowed Britannia to rule the seas, as well as exert some influence on ma...
  15. American Revolution (17069 bytes)
    4: ...hat, interpretations vary. At one end of the spectrum is the view that the American Revolution was not...
    45: ...ritish Royal Proclamation of 1763|Proclamation of 1763]] sought to limit the conflicts between [[Native ...
    62: ...ge the American colonies to unite against British rule.]]
    66: ...s]]), the [[Canada|Canadian]] provinces of [[New Brunswick]] and [[Ontario]], and [[Freetown]], [[Sier...
    80: ...lution did not produce the kind of epoch-breaking rupture with past customs and institutions as the [[...
  16. Timeline of United States revolutionary history (1760-1789) (5450 bytes)
    7: *[[1763]] - [[Treaty of Paris (1763)]] ends [[French and Indian War]]
    8: *[[1763]] - [[Pontiac's Rebellion]] begins
    9: *[[1763]] - [[British Royal Proclamation of 1763]]
  17. History of the United States (1776-1789) (19792 bytes)
    21: ...inant power, but found itself mired in debt and struggling to finance the Navy and Army necessary to w...
    25: ...anize itself as a [[federal government]], and instructed the colonies to write constitutions for thems...
    31: ... York City, where the British occupied the city, brushing aside Washington's feeble efforts of defence...
    41: ...gations incurred during the war, or to become a forum for productive cooperation among the States enco...
    51: ... ratification convention became the focus for a struggle over the wisdom of adopting the Constitution.
  18. Ohio (19444 bytes)
    44: ...dian War]]. As a result of the [[Treaty of Paris (1763)|Treaty of Paris]], the French ceded control of O...
    46: Britain soon passed the [[Proclamation of 1763]], which prohibited the [[American colonies|Ameri...
    50: ...ents by the time it would become a state. On [[February 19]], [[1803]], [[Thomas Jefferson|President J...
    72: ...f, but the unglaciated Allegheny Plateau features rugged hills and forests.
    74: The rugged southeastern quadrant of Ohio, stretching in ...
  19. Michigan (29427 bytes)
    40: ... to [[Kingdom of Great Britain|Great Britain]] in 1763 and then to the new United States two decades lat...
    81: ...dedicated in [[Lansing, Michigan|Lansing]]. The structure cost $1,510,130.
    86: *[[1967]] [[12th Street Riot|Race riots]] struck the city of Detroit. After 5 days of rioting, ...
    98: ** structure of state judicary
    104: ...ate law. Cities and villages are vested with home rule powers, meaning that they can do almost anythin...
  20. Illinois (27007 bytes)
    48: ...n, Illinois was part of the French empire until [[1763]], when it passed to the British. The area was c...
    51: .... The [[Illinois Territory]] was created on [[February 3]], [[1809]]. In [[1818]], Illinois became th...
    76: ...University of Illinois]]). This region's largely rural character helps to sustain a heavily Republica...
    78: ...luding some [[cotton]] farming in the past), more rugged unglaciated topography, [[coal]] mining, and ...
    82: ...iated and therefore comparatively higher and more rugged topography, occupies a small part of the stat...

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