Search results
|
Showing below 45 results starting with #1.
View (previous 500) (next 500) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).
No article title matches
Page text matches
- Industrial Revolution (30001 bytes)
5: The effects spread throughout [[Western Europe]] and [[North America]], eventually affecting...
10: ...nd institutional changes wrought by the end of [[feudalism]] in [[Great Britain]] after the [[English ...
14: ...the improvement in agriculture, and the people in Europe became wealthy because of overseas trade. The...
16: From 1430, people in Europe discovered sea routes to Asia and America. En...
22: - Steel (28384 bytes)
28: ...rgest piece of the meteorite to the [[American Museum of Natural History]] in [[New York City]] in [[1...
36: ...as fully into the iron age by [[900 BC]], central Europe by [[800 BC]]. The reason for this sudden ad...
40: ... a knife found on [[Cyprus]] at a site dated to [[1100 BC]].
44: ...melting technology that would not be practiced in Europe until late medieval times. In Wu, iron smelt...
54: ...ic]] and '''''[[wootz steel|wootz]]''''' by later Europeans, was exported throughout much of Asia. - List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
5: *[[Adachi Hatazo]], (1890-1947), Lieutenant general and Japanese commander in [[New Gui...
83: *[[Fleur Adcock|Adcock, Fleur]], (born 1934), poet
122: *[[Pope Adrian IV|Adrian IV]], (circa 1100-1159), pope from [[1154]] to [[1159]] - Svetlana Savitskaya (713 bytes)
1: ...#1072; Евге́ньевна Сав... - Sofia Kovalevskaya (3306 bytes)
1: ...at [[Stockholm University]], the third woman in [[Europe]] to become a professor. - Sofia Gubaidulina (8325 bytes)
35: *''Garten von freuden und traurigkeiten'' for flute, viola, harp and...
45: ...vollf?Слушишь ты нас, Л...
53: ...mmer Schnee (Теперь всегда l... - Actinium (7046 bytes)
47: | [[Oxidation state]]s ([[Oxide]]) || 3 (neutral)
136: ...radioactive as radium, making it valuable as a [[neutron source]]. Otherwise it has no significant ind...
138: ...m-225 is used in medicine to produce Bi-213 in a reusable generator or can be used alone as an agent f...
146: ... of actinium fluoride with lithium vapor at about 1100 to 1300?C. - Jewellery (4234 bytes)
16: ...[copper]] in [[Anatolia]], [[Iran]] and [[Eastern Europe]].
64: *A history of jewellery 1100-1870 - Joan Evans, 1989. - Ancient Greece (23806 bytes)
4: ... civilizations (from about [[1600 BC]] to about [[1100 BC]]), while others argue that these civilization...
10: ...als in [[18th century|18th]] and [[19th century]] Europe and [[The Americas]].
15: ...the epics of [[Homer]]. The period from [[1100 BC|1100 BC]] to the 8th century BC is a "[[Greek Dark Age...
28: ...f overpopulation. From its ritual roots in [[Indo-European]] prehistory, the practice was elevated to ...
58: ...the dramatists [[Aeschylus]], [[Aristophanes]], [[Euripides]], and [[Sophocles]], the philosophers [[A... - Montana (14119 bytes)
51: ...000 acres (146,000 km²). 275,000 acres (1100 km²) are administered as [[state park]]...
82: The racial makeup of the state is: - New Mexico (31079 bytes)
9: Motto = Crescit eundo (It grows as it goes) |
38: ...ly recognized languages in the state. In [[Spain|European]] [[Spanish language|Spanish]], the state's...
50: ...El Camino Real]], "The Royal Road" as a 700 mile (1100 km) lifeline from the rest of [[New Spain]] to hi...
84: ...development of accompanying cow towns. Cattlemen feuded between each other and with authorities, most ...
103: ...l Richardson (politician)|Bill Richardson]] and Lieutenant Governor [[Diane Denish]], both Democrats, ... - Silk Road (23757 bytes)
3: ...ough the [[Bulgar]]-[[Kypchak]] zone to [[Eastern Europe]] and the [[Crimean peninsula]], and from the...
5: ...ly, if ever, covered the whole distance between [[Europe]], or the [[Middle East]], and [[China]], by ...
11: ...tury BC|1100 BC]], and the [[nomads]] of the vast Eurasian [[steppe]]-lands had domesticated [[horse]]...
13: ...fic]] to [[Africa]], and deep into the heart of [[Europe]]. These grasslands were sufficiently fertile...
30: ... the ancestors of the [[Tocharians]] whose [[Indo-European language]] remained in use in the [[Tarim B... - Trajans Column (10003 bytes)
21: ...ocks of Luna marble, weighting in total more than 1100 t. The spiral stair itself was carved out of 19 b... - Medieval music (31843 bytes)
1: {{History of European art music}}
17: ...had a massive impact on the subsequent history of European music. Most of the surviving notated music ...
27: Chant developed separately in several European centers. The most important were Rome, Spa...
29: .... At this time, Rome was the religious center of Europe, and Paris was the political center. The sta...
32: ...ng]] that was central to the musical tradition of Europe in the Medieval era. The actual [[melody|melo... - Pope Lucius I (1549 bytes)
10: ...relic was brought to [[Roskilde]] around the year 1100, after Lucius had been declared patron of the Dan... - Charles de Gaulle (41586 bytes)
31:
45: ...s his mother's side was a family of rich entrepreneurs from the industrial region of Lille in [[French...
52: ...by that war, namely by the use of tanks, fast manoeuvres and lack of trenches.
87:
89: ... maintained regular contact with past political lieutenants from wartime and RPF days, including sympa... - Phoenix, Arizona (34271 bytes)
166: *[[Medicis Pharmaceutical Corp]]
217: ... of 403/km² (1,044/mi²). The racial makeup of the city was 71.07% [[White (U.S. Census)|Whi...
256: *1100 - KFNX - News/Talk - CNN - - Cave Creek
328: == Museums, attractions and other places of interest ==
331: *[[Arizona Historical Society Museum]] - Russia (28007 bytes)
2: ...y that stretches over a vast expanse of eastern [[Europe]] and northern [[Asia]]. With an area of 17,0...
15: ...te prosperous, due to diversified trade with both Europe and Asia.
23: ...or less functional Christian state on the Eastern European frontier, allowing it to claim succession t...
29: ...qual footing with Britain, France, and Germany in Europe. Unrest of the downtrodden serfs and suppres...
43: ...#1060;едеральное Собр... - List of philosophers (79981 bytes)
232: *[[Pierre Bourdieu]], (1930-2002){{fn|R}}
414: *[[Tadeusz Czezowski]], (1889-1981)
438: *[[Gilles Deleuze]], (1925-1995){{fn|O}}{{fn|R}}
445: *[[Denys the Carthusian]] (or ''Denys de Leeuwis''), (1402-1471){{fn|R}}
451: *[[Paul Deussen]], (1845-1919) - Toltec (2981 bytes)
16: * [[Mixcoatl]] or Mixcoatl Totepeuh
23: ...]] – the last Toltec king, died in exile c. 1100 (?), some 6 years after the fall of Tula - Charlemagne (11466 bytes)
8: ...e founder of the [[Frankish Empire]] in [[Western Europe]], Charlemagne was the elder son of [[Pepin t...
10: ...he News of the Death of his Father and the Great Feudalists offer him the Crown.--Costumes of the Cour...
12: ...]], [[771]], leaving Charlemagne the leader of a reunified Frankish kingdom. Charlemagne was engaged i...
14: ...an Asian elephant. (See [[History of elephants in Europe]].)
16: ...[[476]]. While this title helped to make western Europe independent of [[Constantinople]], Charlemagn... - William I of England (8753 bytes)
16: ...Cathedral of Notre Dame]] at [[Eu, Seine-Maritime|Eu]], Normandy (now in [[Seine-Maritime]]). He was 2...
18: His half-brothers [[Odo of Bayeux]] and [[Robert, Count of Mortain]] played signif...
27: ...s, perhaps based on an interpretation of the [[Bayeux Tapestry]] commemorating the Norman victory, Har...
51: ... II of England| William Rufus]] ([[1056]]–[[1100]]), King of England - History of Germany (53864 bytes)
15: ...Hermann) in the [[Battle of the Teutoburg Forest|Teutoburg Forest]]. Germany as far as the Rhine and t...
19: ...reat Migrations]], which changed the whole map of Europe. The Eastern Germanic peoples destroyed the W...
32: ...s of the Holy Roman Empire. From ''Bildatlas der Deutschen Geschichte'' by Dr Paul Kn? (1895)]]
33: ...ns). In 800 AD Charlemagne's authority in Western Europe was confirmed by his coronation as emperor in...
35: ...he term Kingdom (Empire) of the Germans ("Regnum Teutonicorum") was applied to the Frankish kingdom. - Bronze Age (9344 bytes)
41: ...was a major source of [[tin]] for much of western Europe and [[copper]] was extracted from sites such ...
45: ==Central European Bronze Age==
47: ...|Hatvan culture]]. Some very rich burials like [[Leubingen]] with grave gifts made of gold point to a ...
50: The central European Bronze Age is followed by the Iron Age [[Ha...
59: ...mark. Some linguists believe that a [[proto-Indo-European]] language was probably introduced to the a... - Global warming (53726 bytes)
11: ...rally implies a human influence — the more neutral term [[climate change]] is usually used for a...
42: ...d concludes that the temperatures around 1000 and 1100 AD were comparable to those of the 20th century b...
84: ... net effect of such natural forcings was roughly neutral since then [http://www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_...
117: ...ustained issue, however, for the [[European Union|EU]].
155: ...re the THC weakens, there is still a warming over Europe''. [http://www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar/wg1/... - Easter (31700 bytes)
61: ...tby]] in [[664]]. Churches in western continental Europe used a late Roman method until the late [[8th...
98: ...church. The historian Eusebius reports that Irenaeus, bishop of Lyon (c. 176)(in a letter to Vic...
113: ...ter Vigil concludes with the celebration of the [[Eucharist]] and [[Holy Communion]]. Additional celeb...
147: ...1080;ю смерть поправ,<br>
171: ===Central Europe=== - Mycenaean Greece (6175 bytes)
6: ...ollapse of their Bronze Age civilization around [[1100 BC]]. The collapse is commonly attributed to the ...
12: Around [[1100 BC]] the Mycenaean civilisation collapsed. Numero...
49: ...aled under the [[Dromos]] of the Treasury of [[Atreus]] at [[Mycenae]] as well.<br>
54: ... of the Citadel at Mycenae and of [[Lefkandi]] in Euboia yielded stratified material that allowed the ...
58: ...s]] in [[Attica]] and Skoubris in [[Lefkandi]] ([[Euboia]]) and the settlements of [[Athens]] (Agora),... - Hydrogen (20221 bytes)
90: ...an="4" | H is [[stable isotope|stable]] with 0 [[neutron]]s
92: | [[Deuterium|<sup>2</sup>H]]
94: | colspan="4" | H is stable with 1 neutron
120: ...rged [[proton]] which is the [[Atomic nucleus|nucleus]] of the hydrogen atom. The electron is bound to...
130: ...nd is also used in [[nuclear fusion]] reactions. Deuterium compounds have applications in [[chemistry]... - Polonium (10219 bytes)
98: ...lloy]]ed with [[beryllium]], polonium can be a [[neutron]] source. Other uses;
114: ...ligram amounts in this procedure which uses high neutron fluxes found in [[nuclear reactor]]s.
117: ...years) can be made through the alpha, proton, or deuteron bombardment of [[lead]] or [[bismuth]] in a ...
123: ...lowable body burden for ingested polonium is only 1100 [[becquerels]] (0.03 microcurie), which is equiva... - Amazon Rainforest (4064 bytes)
7: ...sin drained largely by the [[Amazon River]], with 1100 [[tributaries]]. This basin was formed in the [[... - Charles Darwin (47469 bytes)
19: ...dinburgh University]], then one of the largest in Europe. At professor Robert Jameson's ''Wernerian Na...
68: ...in Gower Street, London, and Darwin moved his "museum" in over Christmas. He was showing the stress, a...
125: ...was trying to overthrow. Owen initially appeared neutral, but his review condemned the book, leading D...
161: ===Eugenics and Social Darwinism ===
162: ...h, Galton began calling his social philosophy ''[[Eugenics]]'', and in the [[20th century]] they becam... - First Crusade (34670 bytes)
2: ...peasants from many different nations of [[western Europe]], with little central leadership, travelled ...
5: ...enturies, combined with the relative stability of European borders after the [[Christianization]] of t...
7: ...sh knights and some mercenaries from elsewhere in Europe in the fight against the Islamic [[Moors]]. E...
9: ...ar against the Muslims was not implausible to the European nations. Muslims occupied the centre of the...
12: ... I Comnenus]], the empire was largely confined to Europe and the western coast of [[Anatolia]], and fa... - Germany in the Middle Ages (53864 bytes)
15: ...Hermann) in the [[Battle of the Teutoburg Forest|Teutoburg Forest]]. Germany as far as the Rhine and t...
19: ...reat Migrations]], which changed the whole map of Europe. The Eastern Germanic peoples destroyed the W...
32: ...s of the Holy Roman Empire. From ''Bildatlas der Deutschen Geschichte'' by Dr Paul Kn? (1895)]]
33: ...ns). In 800 AD Charlemagne's authority in Western Europe was confirmed by his coronation as emperor in...
35: ...he term Kingdom (Empire) of the Germans ("Regnum Teutonicorum") was applied to the Frankish kingdom. - Culture of Russia (14552 bytes)
22: ...he [[Naryshkin baroque]],with many similarties to European baroque style, was popular. Througout the ...
64: *"[[Eugene Onegin (opera)|Eugene Onegin]]"
87: ...spread in many adjacent areas of Asia and Eastern Europe. National subdivisions of Russia have additio...
104: *[[Eugene Onegin]]
140: ... of the [[Hermitage Museum]] and the [[Russian Museum]]. - European-influenced classical music (18917 bytes)
2: {{History of European art music}}
4: ...usic produced in, or rooted in the traditions of, European art, ecclesiastical and concert music, part...
10: ...gorian Chant]], was the dominant form until about 1100.
35: ...r other direct involvement with the audience. Amateur private readings of [[chamber music]] are more i...
41: ...ces. During the Classical period, [[Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart|Mozart]] and [[Ludwig van Beethoven|Beeth... - History of science in the Middle Ages (30877 bytes)
2: ...though the term 'Middle Ages' usually refers to [[European history]], scientific advances in the [[Eas...
4: [[Western Europe]] entered the Middle Ages with great difficul...
14: ...e spread of [[Islam]] in the [[7th century]], the European West became a tapestry of rural populations...
18: ...], having succeeded at uniting a great portion of Europe under his domain, and in order to further uni...
27: ...]], (mainly in [[Sicily]] and [[Spain]]), allowed Europeans access to preserved copies of [[Ancient Gr... - Elamite Empire (23098 bytes)
13: ...language|Sumerian]], and [[Iranian languages|Indo-European]] languages. Some scholars believe the lang...
17: ... 3100?2900 BCE, Iran, kept at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.]]
21: ...amite civilization grew up east of the Tigris and Euphrates, in the watershed of the river [[Karun]]. ...
26: *Middle Elamite period: 1500 BC – 1100 BC (Anzanite dynasty until the Babylonian invasio...
27: *Neo-Elamite period: ca. 1100 BC – 539 BC (characterized by Iranian and S... - List of autonomous entities (9309 bytes)
91: ...;– Chal'm Tangč/Хальм Тангч)
111: ...1076;мурт Элькун)
115: ...穹綯Нохчичьо)
120: ...1103; область)
139: ... (Ost'-Ordynskij Burjatija/Усть-Ордынск... - Vincent van Gogh (11980 bytes)
2: ... produced all of his work (some 900 paintings and 1100 drawings) during a period of only ten years befor...
4: ...at of his contemporaries. The [[Kroller-Muller Museum]] in [[Otterlo]] (also in [[the Netherlands]]), ...
22: ...(Dutch ''Aardappeleters'', now in The Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam).
24: ... he was dismissed after a few months by Professor Eug�ne Siberdt. Van Gogh did, however, become fami...
29: ...umbnail|360px|The Yellow House, 1888. Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam]] - North Pole (13759 bytes)
36: ...e Lieutenant Colonel [[Joseph O. Fletcher]] and Lieutenant [[William P. Benedict]] landed a plane at t...
55: ..., in Canada. During the 20th century it has moved 1100 km, and since [[1970]] its rate of motion has acc...
69: ...point farthest from any northern coastline, about 1100 km from the nearest coast. It is a geographic con... - Igor Stravinsky (26622 bytes)
1: ... ensemble combinations and classical forms. His oeuvre included everything from symphonies to [[piano...
12: ...is stylistic development: from the ''L'oiseau de feu'', whose style draws largely on Rimsky-Korsakov, ...
21: ...le to give Stravinsky regular support through a pseudonymous "benefactor". The composer was also able...
25: ...t ballet ended up being the famous ''L'Oiseau de Feu''. However, because of World War I and the Octob...
41: The first of the ballets, ''L'oiseau de feu'', is notable for its unusual introduction (tripl... - Saint Petersburg (36589 bytes)
38: ...rgest city, Europe's fourth largest city, a major European cultural center and the most important Russ...
42: ...#1092;едеральный окру...
52: ...f St. Petersburg, sometimes called the outdoor museum of [[Neoclassicism]], was the first Russian patr...
58: ...Stroganov]] palace (1752–1754, now a wax museum), the [[Mikhail Illarionovich Vorontsov|Vorontso...
60: ...ossNeva.jpg|center|thumb|650px|The [[Hermitage Museum]] complex with the [[Winter Palace]] at right]] - Liquid (2220 bytes)
38: ...#1046;идкость]] - Industry (5421 bytes)
4: ...ion]], which upset previous [[mercantile]] and [[feudal]] economies through many successive rapid adva...
36: ====>[[Pharmaceutical]]s====
37: * [[List of pharmaceutical companies]]
69: ...dbysectors&indscrpage=%2findustries Industries | Reuters.com]
86: ...#1083;енность]] - Song Dynasty (16385 bytes)
3: ...] from [[960]]-[[1279]]. Its founding marked the reunification of China for the first time since the f...
16: ...00 inhabitants at this point: far larger than any European city.
123: <td>[[1085]]-[[1100]]</td>
126:
134: <td>[[1100]]-[[1125]]</td>
View (previous 500) (next 500) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).