Study History >> sitemap >> Page:9:
  • Raymond Dronne
  • Armored Marine Regiment
  • Roger Barberot
  • Dwight D. Eisenhower
  • Alphonse June
  • Admiral Chester Nimitz
  • Admiral Raymond Spruance
  • Audie Leon Murphy.
  • Bernard Montgomery
  • Charles Wingate
  • Claire Lee Chennault
  • Claude Auchinleck
  • David Stirling
  • Erwin Rommel
  • Frederick Browning
  • george patton
  • Georgy Zhukov
  • Hiro Onoda
  • Isoroku Yamamoto
  • Jürgen von Arnim Last German leader in Africa
  • Lyudmila Pavlichenko
  • Lord Louis Mountbatten
  • Maurice Gamelin
  • Shoichi Yokoi
  • Vasily Grigoryevich Zaitsev
  • Winston Churchill
  • 1st Parachute Chasseur Regiment
  • 1st Army (France)
  • 1st US Infantry Division
  • 1st Shock Battalion
  • 1st Special Service Detachment the Devil's Brigade (USA/Canada)
  • 1st Free French Division (1st DFL)
  • 1st Airborne Division (UK)
  • Chindits
  • British Commandos
  • African Commandos
  • japanese armored division
  • Italian Battleship Division
  • Fallschirmjager
  • Strength 136
  • Kenpeitai/Kempeitai
  • The Afrika Korps
  • The British Armored Division
  • The DCR (Armored Reserve Division) 1939-1940
  • The Panzer Division
  • The Flying Tigers
  • the Jedburghs
  • Long Range Desert Group (LRDG)
  • Office of Strategic Services (OSS)
  • panzergrenadier
  • Royal Marines
  • U.S. Armored Division
  • U.S. Marine Corps
  • British Eighth Army
  • French commandos in India
  • On a machine gun...
  • In the trapped house
  • technique of murder
  • In the silk and the strings
  • In the company of buffalo leeches
  • With the crocodiles
  • Surfing in the Arabian Sea
  • A bucket of minium in hand...
  • The emergency bag...
  • Wartime Literature
  • Russian literature in the 20th century
  • The Thirty Glorious
  • Soviet emigration
  • May-68
  • 15th century armor
  • Norman armor
  • Arab armors
  • Vouge
  • Angon
  • Crossbow
  • Bassinet (helmet)
  • Crossbow bolt
  • Cervelière
  • Scimitar
  • Wheeled Dagger
  • Durandal
  • flamberge
  • framed
  • Francisque (weapon)
  • Battle Axe
  • Hauberk
  • Helm
  • Mercy
  • Morion (helmet)
  • Spades
  • Salad
  • Trebuchet
  • Yataghan
  • Battle of Kosovo Polje
  • Battle of Nicopolis
  • Bouvines
  • The Battle of Hastings
  • POITIERS (battle of 732)
  • Siege of Paris by the Vikings in the year 885
  • Agincourt
  • Battle of Brignais
  • Battle of Najera
  • Cocherel
  • Crecy
  • The lock
  • English successes and the Treaty of Brétigny (1338-1360)
  • The resumption of war. The French recovery (1360-1388)
  • The time of truce (1388-1411)
  • The English attempt at a dual monarchy (1411-1435)
  • The French reconquest (1435-1453).
  • English longbow (longbow)
  • Archers (Crécy and general)
  • Arnaud de Cervolle - the Archpriest
  • Charles of France
  • Charles II, the Bad
  • Charles VI the Beloved or the Fool
  • Charles VII, the Victorious, the Well-Served
  • Du Guesclin
  • Flayers
  • Edward II
  • Edward III
  • Edward, the Black Prince
  • Gaston III of Foix, Phoebus or Fébus
  • Big Companies
  • Henry V (King of England)
  • John I of Luxembourg, the blind
  • Jean III de Grailly (Captal de Buch)
  • Jeanne D'Arc
  • Late-Venus
  • Avalon
  • Ban de Benoic
  • Battle of Camlann
  • heat-sealing
  • Camelot
  • Caradoc
  • Excalibur
  • Morgana Fairy
  • Fairy Viviane the Lady of the Lake
  • Gawain (Gawain)
  • grail
  • Lancelot of the Lake
  • Arthurian legend
  • Leodagan
  • Orcane Bundle
  • Merlin the wizard
  • Percival
  • Queen Guinevere
  • King Arthur
  • Tintagel
  • Uther Pendragon
  • yvain
  • Battle of Mount Gisard
  • Hattin
  • The First Crusade and the First Crusader Settlements in the Holy Land
  • 14- The numbers of the crusades
  • second crusade
  • The Fourth Crusade
  • Seljuks
  • Third Crusade
  • Alamut
  • Teutonic Knights
  • The Templar Knights
  • Nizarites, (assassins)
  • Turcopolis
  • Legends around the Order of the Temple
  • First Crusade (1096-1099)
  • The Beginnings of the Order of the Temple
  • The foundation of the Order of the Temple
  • The gratitude
  • Receipt in order
  • Daily life
  • The Templars and the War
  • The Templars seen by their enemies
  • The main battles
  • Organization of the Order
  • The Templars and Money
  • The fortresses
  • Commanderies
  • The Fall of the Order
  • The trial
  • The fate of dignitaries
  • El-Baybars en Malik en-Zahir Roukn ed-Din el-Salihi
  • Godefroid (Godefroy) of Bouillon
  • Raymond IV called St-Gilles
  • Zenghi Imad ed-Din
  • Clovis or Chlodovechus
  • Enguerrand De Marigny
  • Eude of Paris
  • scottish guard
  • Guillaume DeNogaret
  • William I the Conqueror
  • Henry V of England
  • Hugues Capet
  • John without land
  • List of papers
  • Louis X Le Hutin
  • Louis XI of France
  • Robert de Bruce (Earl of Carrick)
  • Rollo
  • Vlad III Tepes the Impaler (Dracula)
  • William Wallace
  • The man
  • The king
  • Foreign politic
  • the crusader
  • Youth
  • The crusade
  • return from crusade
  • the administrator
  • Personality
  • Foreign Policy
  • Relationship with the Holy See
  • Internal policy
  • The Templar trial
  • End of reign
  • Richard the Lionheart:Family and Childhood
  • Richard Coeur de lion:Revolt against his father Henry II
  • Richard the Lionheart:The Third Crusade
  • Attila, the scourge of God, the Hun
  • Babur
  • Battle of Mohi
  • Arrow Rider
  • Cossacks
  • Equipment of the Mongol armies of the 13th century
  • Genghis Khan
  • Golden Horde
  • Katana
  • The Divine Wind (Kamikaze)
  • The Khan's armies
  • Mongols
  • Ögödei
  • Samurai
  • Subötai
  • Timurids
  • Turks
  • Aelle (or Aella) of Northumbria
  • Alfred the Great
  • Battle of Ethandun
  • Battle of Brunanburh
  • Battle of Maserfield
  • Battle of Tettenhall
  • Battle of Mount Badon
  • Bernicie
  • Bamburgh Castle (bebbanburg)
  • Danelaw
  • Deira
  • Edmund of East Anglia
  • Egbert of Wessex
  • Great Army (Vikings)
  • Guthrum the Elder
  • Halfdan I Ragnarsson
  • Ivar Ragnarson the boneless
  • Northumbria
  • Ragnar Lodbrok (Lothbrok)
  • Kingdom of Essex
  • Kingdom of East Anglia
  • Kingdom of Mercia
  • Kingdom of Wessex
  • Viking Kingdom of York
  • Ubba Ragnarson
  • Æthelstan
  • How Russia Became Christian
  • The decline of kyiv
  • The Inquisition or the Witch Hunt
  • the carlist wars
  • Cold War and North American military bases in Franco's Spain
  • The Disaster of 1898:continuities and ruptures in the Restoration regime
  • Discovery, conquest, race, Hispanidad, colonization... back and forth with October 12.
  • The War of the Oranges
  • The maquis:the anti-fascist guerrilla in Spain.
  • Spain in its geopolitics
  • Amadeo I:the impossible monarchy.
  • The 1911 revolt in Carcaixent (Ribera Alta, Valencia)
  • Feminism and suffragism in Spain:the right of women to vote.
  • Manufactures in the Old Regime
  • Sidi Ifni:the forgotten war
  • The Munich Conspiracy
  • Annual and the Spanish protectorate of Morocco
  • 15M one year later
  • Franco's timeline
  • The bombing of Guernica:75th anniversary.
  • The cult of personality under Franco
  • The fundamental laws of Francoism
  • The Pedagogical Missions of the Second Republic
  • An approach to the Spain of the eighteenth century:subsistence crisis, Enlightenment and crisis of the Old Regime
  • Chronology of the beginning of the 20th century in Spain
  • Prime's death
  • 23-F in your documents
  • The remains of the Spanish empire
  • Chronology of the Democratic Administration
  • The end of the Spanish overseas empire
  • The disaster of Annual
  • The Tragic Week and the battle of Barranco del Lobo
  • Political transition and economic evolution
  • The economic crisis of 1866
  • The living memory:memories of an international brigadista
  • Transition Notes
  • The Second Republic:between memory and analysis
  • Spain and World War I
  • Chronology of the reign of Alfonso XIII
  • Turnism and rigging in the Restoration
  • The Crisis of the 17th Century:Geoffrey Parker's Cursed Century
  • Results of the referendum of the Constitution of 1978
  • The “non nata” Constitution of 1873
  • Aerial bombardment of Cartagena during the civil war
  • The extreme right in Spain
  • The Catalan revolt of 1934:l’Estat Català
  • The invasion of the Aran Valley
  • The Perejil Island Conflict
  • The bombardment of Jaén during the Spanish Civil War
  • Political violence during the Spanish Transition:the Atocha massacre.
  • The Spanish nuclear weapon:the “Islero Project”
  • The Murcian canton
  • The last of the Philippines:the end of the Spanish overseas empire.
  • The Bay of Pigs Invasion
  • United States military bases:an instrument of hegemony.
  • Martin Luther King:I have a dream, fifty years later
  • 9/11 in the history of the first decade of the 21st century
  • The United States kills Osama Bin Laden
  • American imperialism at the beginning of the 20th century
  • The Hundred Kilos Club:fat and very honorable
  • The Ténéré tree and the idiot who crashed into it
  • Cynisca, the first to win an Olympic victory
  • Tin Hinan, the queen who comes from afar
  • Tapputi-Belet-ekalle, perfumer at the king's court
  • Amanirenas, Queen of the Kingdom of Kush
  • Puduhepa, Hittite queen
  • Ban Zhao, ancient historian
  • Teuta, queen and pirate
  • Archidamia, defender of Sparta
  • The Lady of Cao, leader shaking up prejudices
  • Hetpet, priestess of ancient Egypt
  • Olympias, ambitious queen
  • Aspasia, influential courtesan
  • Berenice IV, queen executed
  • Cleopatra VII, queen of legend
  • Iâhhotep I, Egyptian regent
  • Boadicea, symbol of resistance
  • Nefertari, deified queen
  • Hypathie, mathematician and philosopher
  • Aglaonice, Mistress of the Stars
  • Gorgo, Queen of Sparta
  • Triệu Thị Trinh, fighting heroine
  • The Trung Sisters, heroic fighters
  • Artemis I, advisor to Xerxes
  • Velleda, "she who sees"
  • Sapphô, lyrical poetess
  • Samsi, Queen of the Kingdom of Kedar
  • Artemis II, builder widow
  • Zenobia, Conquering Empress
  • Agrippina the Younger, manipulative empress
  • Berenice II of Egypt, in the stars
  • Mary the Jewess, pioneer of alchemy
  • Nefertiti, Great Royal Wife
  • Tiyi, powerful queen of Egypt
  • Fu Hao, powerful military leader
  • Kallipáteira, the first woman in a stadium
  • Méryt-Ptah, first doctor
  • Enheduanna, the oldest known writer
  • Lǚ Mǔ, at the head of a rebellion
  • Mavia, warrior queen in revolt against Rome
  • Hatshepsut, king-pharaoh
  • Tarabai, warrior regent and fine strategist
  • Rani Velu Nachiyar, "the brave woman"
  • Marietta Robusti "the Tintoretta", Venetian painter
  • Laura Bassi, mathematician and physicist
  • Victoria Montou, rebellious slave
  • Shen Yunying, Chinese General
  • Anacaona, cacique and resistant to colonization
  • Gao Guiying, rebellious fighter
  • Qin Liangyu, Chinese warlord
  • Kimpa Vita, prophetess
  • Huang Daopo, weaver and inventor
  • Sitt al-Mulk, Fatimid regent
  • Hrotsvita de Gandersheim, the first German poetess
  • Anne Comnène, princess and historian
  • Guda, copyist and illuminator
  • Dhuoda, pedagogue and politician
  • Xiao Yanyan, empress and warlord
  • Brunehaut, queen of the Franks
  • Fredegonda, Merovingian queen
  • The great forgotten Viking warrior
  • Melchora Aquino, the great lady of the revolution
  • Louise Armaindo, world cycling champion
  • Marie-Thérèse Figueur, “Sans-Gêne” soldier
  • Pauline Viardot, singer and composer
  • Ōtagaki Rengetsu, poet nun
  • Madam C.J. Walker, the businesswoman who started from scratch
  • Victorine Gorget, leader of the Commune
  • Elisabeth Dmitrieff, Communard aristocrat
  • Eulalie Papavoine, paramedic of the Commune
  • Gertrude Käsebier, successful photographer
  • Ogura Yuki, Japanese painter
  • Raymonde Dien, against the war in Indochina
  • Larissa Chepitko, talented director
  • Petra Herrera, soldier
  • Simone Louise des Forest, “by car Simone! »
  • Alfonsina Strada, "the devil in petticoats"
  • Baya, Algerian painter
  • Victoria Santa Cruz, Peruvian choreographer
  • Jane Vialle, resistant senator
  • Mary Read, the fight on equal terms
  • Mary Stuart, Martyr Queen
  • Madame de La Fayette, renowned writer
  • Marie-Antoinette of Austria, the unloved
  • Emilie du Châtelet, translator of Newton
  • Angélique du Coudray, midwifery teacher
  • Caroline Herschel, passionate astronomer
  • Grace O'Malley, Pirate Princess
  • Louise d'Epinay, counter-current pedagogue
  • Marguerite of Valois, Queen Margot
  • Catherine de Medici, the reins of power
  • Diane de Poitiers, skilful manager and influential mistress
  • Lucrezia Borgia, political tool
  • Olympe de Gouges, humanist revolutionary
  • Charlotte Corday, political fanaticism
  • Anne Bonny, legendary pirate
  • The Marquise de Sévigné, epistolary writer
  • Marie de Gournay, freelance writer
  • Nzinga Mbende, queen strategist, warrior and diplomat
  • Louise of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, opponent of Napoleon
  • Théroigne de Méricourt, personality of the Revolution
  • Elisabeth Vigée Le Brun, great portrait painter
  • Manon Roland, personality of the Revolution
  • Louise Labé, poet
  • Aminatou de Zaria, the warrior queen
  • Jane Colden, America's first botanist
  • Gabriela Silang, the Generala
  • Juliette Récamier, woman of spirit
  • Solitude, Guadeloupe resistance fighter
  • Mary Jemison, negotiator for her tribe
  • Sayyida al-Hurra, Pirate Queen
  • Maria Gaetana Agnesi, mathematician and philosopher
  • Anne Dieu-le-Veut, buccaneer
  • Nanny, queen of chestnuts
  • Jeanne Barret, explorer and botanist
  • Weetamoo, Native American warrior chief
  • Elizabeth I, Queen of England
  • Louise Antonini, corsair turned soldier
  • Nanyehi or Nancy Ward, "beloved woman" of the Cherokee people
  • Maria Theresa of Austria "the Great", Empress
  • Isabel Godin des Odonais, survivor of the jungle
  • Mary Wollstonecraft, pioneer of feminism
  • Sultana Hürrem, woman of influence
  • Rani Abbakka Chowta, the fearless queen
  • Artemisia Lomi Gentileschi, dramatic painter
  • Phillis Wheatley, slave poet
  • Jacquette de Montbron, architect during the Renaissance
  • Marie-Claire Bonheur, Empress of Haiti
  • Sophie de Grouchy, intellectual and woman of letters
  • Manuela Beltrán, at the head of a revolt
  • The Begum Samru, skillful sovereign
  • Toypurina, revolt against colonization
  • Bartolina Sisa, rebel fighter
  • Sanité Belair, heroine of Haiti's independence
  • Maria Sibylla Merian, artist and naturalist
  • Okuni, inventor of artistic styles
  • Christine de Pizan, the first French woman of letters
  • Murasaki Shikibu, court poetess
  • Eleanor of Aquitaine, captive rebel
  • Anne of Brittany, Protective Duchess
  • Dorotea Bocchi, doctor and academic
  • Hangaku Gozen, samurai at the head of an army
  • Trotula of Salerno, pioneer of gynecology
  • Herrade de Landsberg, abbess and encyclopaedist
  • Razia al-Din, Sultan of Delhi
  • Jeanne de Belleville, corsair out of revenge
  • Isabella I of Castile or Isabella the Catholic
  • Fatima el Fihriya, founder of the first university
  • Matilda of Tuscany, fighting countess
  • Joan of Arc, heroine of the History of France
  • Urraque, Queen of Castile and León
  • Arwa al-Sulayhi, Queen of Yemen for 40 years
  • Mandukhai Khatun, the wise queen
  • Marguerite Porete, subversive writer
  • Wu Zetian, sole empress in Chinese history
  • Chajar ad-Durr, slave who became queen
  • Kahena, warrior queen
  • Theodora, courtesan turned empress
  • Hōjō Masako, onna-bugeisha and woman of power
  • Tomoe Gozen, mythical samurai
  • Bûrândûkht, Empress of Persia
  • Bettisia Gozzadini, first teacher
  • Fannou, Almoravid princess
  • Zaynab Nefzaouia, Queen and King's Advisor
  • Agnes of Dunbar, Tenacious Guardian
  • Yolande of Aragon, Duchess of Anjou
  • Hafsa bint al-Hajj, poet of Al-Andalus
  • Töregene Khatun, Regent of the Mongol Empire
  • Sei Shōnagon, witness to court life
  • Queen Seondeok of Silla, protector of arts and culture
  • Shin Sawbu, the most famous ruler of Indochina
  • Li Qingzhao, one of the greatest Chinese poetesses
  • Tamar, Georgia's most illustrious monarch
  • The Princess of Pingyang, in command of the "lady's army"
  • Caterina Sforza, countess and woman of power
  • Khutulun, the wrestling princess
  • Bathilde, slave who became queen of the Franks
  • Azalaïs de Porcairagues, the troubadouress
  • Aïcha Al-Qourtoubiya, Andalusian poetess
  • Suiko, first Empress of Japan
  • Al-Khansā’, renowned poetess
  • Mata Hari, dancer and double spy
  • Calamity Jane, between myth and reality
  • Sarah Bernhardt, the "sacred monster"
  • Berthe Morisot, impressionist painter
  • Camille Claudel, genius sculptor
  • Jane Austen, the biting social critic
  • Sophie Germain, self-taught mathematician
  • Cixi, Empress
  • Mary Cassatt, post-impressionist
  • Clara Zetkin, feminist journalist
  • Rosa Bonheur, animal painter
  • Louise Michel, anarchist activist
  • Helen Keller, Force of Will
  • Marie Curie, the passion for science
  • George Sand, prolific writer
  • Lucie Baud, rebellious worker
  • Mary Shelley, major figure in literature
  • Isadora Duncan, modern dancer
  • Charlotte Cooper, first medalist
  • Emma Goldman, anarchist and feminist
  • Marie Pape-Carpantier, pioneer pedagogue
  • Suzanne Lacore, one of the first women in the French government
  • Charlotte Brontë, the eldest of the sisters
  • Myeongseong, Queen Min
  • Lucy Stone, feminist and abolitionist
  • Ada Lovelace, first programmer
  • Sophie Rostopchine, Countess of Ségur
  • Gertrude Stein, poet and visionary collector
  • Bertha von Suttner, first Nobel Peace Prize
  • Emily Brontë, solitary writer
  • Cécile Brunschvicg, militant politician
  • Harriet Tubman, "Moses of the Black People"
  • Susan B. Anthony, arrested for voting
  • Madam Yoko, Queen of Senehun
  • Ranavalona I, queen of Madagascar
  • Nathalie Lemel, anarchist activist
  • Victoria of the United Kingdom, Queen of Great Britain and Ireland
  • Emily Dickinson, reclusive poetess
  • Yaa Asantewaa, anti-colonialist rebel
  • Ching Shih, "The Terror of South China"
  • Nakano Takeko, leader of the "women's army"
  • Qiú Jǐn, feminist and revolutionary poet
  • Sojourner Truth, former slave turned abolitionist
  • Lili'uokalani, last queen of Hawaii
  • Nettie Stevens, pioneer of genetics
  • Tarenorerer, Aboriginal leader of an anti-colonialist rebellion
  • Annie Smith Peck, mountaineer and lecturer
  • Bhikaiji Rustom Cama, figure of the Indian independence movement
  • Florence Nightingale, Nursing Pioneer
  • Lakshmi Bâî, symbol of resistance to colonization
  • Mary Prince, witness to slavery
  • Élisa Lemonnier, founder of the first school for all
  • Laskarina Bouboulina, heroine of the Greek War of Independence
  • Taytu Betul, Queen of the Ethiopian Empire
  • Sarah Winnemucca, Native American writer
  • Juana Azurduy de Padilla, intrepid revolutionary
  • Ngalifourou, the last sovereign of black Africa
  • Manuela Sáenz, feminist revolutionary
  • Rebecca Davis Lee Crumpler, pioneering physician
  • Mary Anning, fossil hunter
  • Lalla Fatma N'Soumer, resistant to colonization
  • Susette La Flesche, Native American writer and activist
  • Bíawacheeitchish, Female Chef
  • Lumina Sophie, insurgent against segregation
  • Nellie Bly, the first investigative journalist
  • Lozen, Apache Fighter
  • Lucy Parsons, tireless anarchist activist
  • Chennamma, rebel queen of Kittur
  • Zewditou, ruler of Ethiopia
  • Marie Durocher, pioneer in obstetrics
  • Clara Schumann, virtuoso pianist
  • Mary Fields, “Stagecoach Mary”
  • Anna Pavlova, prima ballerina
  • Mariana Grajales, heroine of independence
  • Prudence Crandall, right to education activist
  • Nana Asma'u, intellectual princess
  • Annie Oakley, gunslinger
  • Ndaté Yalla Mbodj, heroine of the resistance to colonization
  • Nannerl Mozart, the sacrificed prodigy
  • Hilma af Klint, discreet pioneer of abstract art
  • Belle Starr, Legendary Outlaw
  • Seh-Dong-Hong-Beh, leader of the "Amazons" of Dahomey
  • Jeanne Deroin, legislative candidate in 1849
  • Mary Bowser, a spy in the White House
  • Paula Modersohn-Becker, pioneer of Expressionism
  • Sultan Shah Jahan Begum, Queen of Bhopal
  • Mary Ann Shadd Cary, human rights activist
  • Cécile Fatiman, priestess at Bois-Caïman
  • Nehanda Nyakasikana, insurgent medium
  • Cathay Williams, first African-American soldier
  • Sarah Harris Fayerweather, determined student
  • Madge Syers, figure skating pioneer
  • Ogino Ginko, Japan's first female doctor
  • Mary Thomas, Queen of Rioters
  • Rosemonde Gérard, forgotten poetess
  • Mary Seacole, discriminated nurse
  • Marcello, painter and sculptor
  • Buffalo Calf Road Woman, the sister who saved her brother
  • Marie Bracquemond, impressionist painter
  • Mwana Kupona, Swahili poetess
  • Carlota Lucumi, revolted against slavery
  • Nicole Girard-Mangin, doctor at the front
  • Fanny Bullock Workman, geographer and explorer
  • Labotsibeni Mdluli, queen mother and regent
  • Fanny Mendelssohn, upset composer
  • Ilen Embet, skillful leader
  • Rose Fortune, business woman with character
  • Nadira, poetess and regent
  • Sultan Jahan, progressive queen
  • Adrienne Grandpierre-Deverzy, painter
  • Chipeta, chef and negotiator
  • Lucie Cousturier, engaged painter
  • Flora Nwapa, the mother of modern African literature
  • Bertha Benz, automotive pioneer
  • Fukuda Hideko, author and feminist activist
  • Marianne von Werefkin, expressionist painter
  • Maria Firmina dos Reis, a voice against slavery
  • Beatrix Potter, famous author of children's books
  • Edmonia Lewis, talented sculptor
  • Uemura Shōen, painter of women
  • Annie Cohen Kopchovsky, bicycle adventurer
  • Shaaw Tláa, Tagish discoverer
  • Marie Laveau, queen of voodoo
  • Sarala Devi Chaudhurani, girls' education activist
  • Pomare IV, Queen of Tahiti
  • Wu Zao, poetess
  • Kate Warne, first private detective
  • Alice Guy, the first filmmaker
  • Zhang Shan, sniper
  • Aimée Lallement, Righteous Among the Nations
  • Rosa Parks, “the woman who sat down”
  • Suzanne Lenglen, tennis star
  • Valentina Tereshkova, the first woman in space
  • Edurne Pasaban, pioneer mountaineer
  • Simone de Beauvoir, icon of feminism
  • Edith Cresson, only French Prime Minister
  • Aung San Suu Kyi, the Lady of Yangon
  • Coco Chanel, successful entrepreneur
  • Amelia Earhart, pioneer aviator
  • Marilyn Monroe, legendary actress
  • Margaret Thatcher, the “Iron Lady”
  • Audrey Hepburn, cinema icon
  • Frida Kahlo, Mexican painter
  • Hannah Arendt, political theorist
  • Élise Rivet, Righteous Among the Nations
  • Hélène Boucher, feminist aviator
  • Marjorie Gestring, the youngest medalist at the Olympic Games
  • Marie-Madeleine Fourcade, leader of a Resistance network
  • Martina Navrátilová, legendary tennis player
  • Irène Joliot-Curie, taking over from her mother
  • Anne Frank, the young martyr
  • Gertrude Ederle, 1st to swim across the English Channel
  • Edith Piaf "la Môme", legendary singer
  • Angela Davis, human rights activist
  • Yvonne Hagnauer, great pedagogue and Righteous Among the Nations
  • Lucie Aubrac, resistance fighter and activist
  • Louise Boyd, "the girl who tamed the Arctic"
  • Benazir Bhutto, Pakistani Prime Minister
  • Eliška Junková, racing driver
  • Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin, pioneer astronomer
  • Indira Gandhi, controversial prime minister
  • Ann Bancroft, polar explorer
  • Karen Blixen, a major figure in Danish literature
  • Lili Boulanger, composer with a tragic destiny
  • Germaine Tillion, engaged ethnologist
  • Madeleine Braun, First Vice-President of the National Assembly
  • Phûlan Devi, "Queen of bandits"
  • Audre Lorde, humanist poet
  • Simone Veil, abortion advocate
  • Rosalind Elsie Franklin, dispossessed genius
  • Joséphine Baker, committed artist
  • Suzanne Buisson, feminist resistant
  • Neta Snook, aviation pioneer
  • Agatha Christie, “Queen of Crime”
  • Billie Holiday, great jazz singer
  • Hedy Lamarr, actress and inventor
  • Bessie Coleman, aviation pioneer
  • Gabrielle Petit, nurse spy
  • Daisy Bates, civil rights activist
  • Henrietta Swan Leavitt, the astronomer who revolutionized our view of the universe
  • Junko Tabei, the first woman to climb Everest
  • Virginia Woolf, feminist writer
  • Ella Fitzgerald, "The Great Lady of Jazz"
  • Sophie Scholl, resistant teacher
  • Grace Kelly, actress and princess
  • Andrée De Jongh, resistant leader
  • Bette Davis, legendary actress
  • Zora Neale Hurston, American writer
  • Dorothy Hodgkin, committed chemist
  • Alexandra David-Néel, tireless explorer
  • Marie-Louise Giraud, “angel maker”
  • Vivian Maier, secret street photographer
  • Stephanie Kwolek, inventor of Kevlar
  • Sister Emmanuelle, "the ragpickers' little sister"
  • Zitkala-Ša, Native American writer and activist
  • Paulette Nardal, “Black is beautiful! »
  • Lise Meitner, forgotten by the Nobel Prize
  • Simone Signoret, actress and writer
  • Danielle Casanova, communist resistant
  • Adrienne Bolland, fearless aviator and feminist
  • Ida B. Wells, leader of the civil rights movement
  • María Izquierdo, talented painter
  • Gabriela Mistral, feminist poet
  • Maria Montessori, doctor and pedagogue
  • Maya Angelou, activist artist
  • Jane Addams, peace activist
  • Wangari Muta Maathai, scientist and environmental activist
  • Nina Simone, activist artist
  • Assia Djebar, historian and woman of letters
  • Hellé Nice, intrepid dancer and racing driver
  • Amy Jacques Garvey, journalist and activist
  • Marguerite Duras, writer and director
  • Qian Xiuling, scientist and war heroine
  • Hattie McDaniel, the first Oscar-winning black actress
  • Charlotte Delbo, resistant writer
  • Marie Marvingt, "the bride of danger"
  • Huda Sharawi, pioneer of feminism
  • Itô Noé, anarchist feminist
  • Clärenore Stinnes, adventurous explorer
  • Chien-Shiung Wu, brilliant physicist
  • Gisèle Rabesahala, human rights lawyer
  • Anna Coleman Ladd, face sculptor
  • Emmy Noether, mathematical genius
  • Julia de Burgos, committed poet
  • Aline Sitoé Diatta, heroine of civil disobedience
  • Katherine Johnson, space race pioneer
  • Marina Raskova, creator of “Night Witches”
  • Gwendolyn Brooks, brilliant poet
  • Zhang Zhixin, “truth follower”
  • Septima Poinsette Clark, Mother of the Civil Rights Movement
  • Baroness Raymonde de Laroche, first licensed aviator
  • Viola Desmond, in the fight against segregation in Canada
  • Bessie Stringfield, “the biker queen of Miami”
  • Gerda Taro, shadow photo-reporter
  • Beryl Markham, adventurer and aviation pioneer
  • Gabriele Münter, eminent expressionist painter
  • Lorraine Hansberry, activist playwright
  • Mala Zimetbaum, heroic resister
  • Sirimavo Bandaranaike, first head of government
  • Aoua Keïta, activist midwife
  • Celia Sánchez, figure of the Cuban revolution
  • Noor Inayat Khan, fearless spy
  • Nadia Comăneci, gymnastics to perfection
  • Lotfia ElNadi, air pioneer
  • Jaha Dukureh, activist against female circumcision
  • Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, committed writer
  • Emmanuelle Charpentier and Jennifer Doudna, the genetics revolution
  • Margaret Geller, pioneer in cartography of the Universe
  • Glenda Gray, in the fight against HIV
  • Mae Jemison, astronaut, scientist, artist
  • Joséphine Pencalet, one of the first elected women in France
  • Elizabeth Eckford, one of the Little Rock Nine
  • Kwon Ki-ok, aviator and activist
  • Maria Tallchief, prima ballerina
  • Dorothy Vaughan, visionary mathematician
  • Mahalia Jackson, the Queen of the Gospel
  • Carrie Fisher, mythical princess and committed actress
  • Emily Kame Kngwarreye, inexhaustible artist
  • Ryu Gwan-Sun, symbol of resistance
  • Funmilayo Ransome Kuti, pioneer of women's rights
  • Amrita Sher-Gil, painter with double roots
  • Chai Jing, in the fight against air pollution
  • Elizabeth Warren, against the abuses of finance
  • Tania the guerrilla, heroine of the revolution
  • Tawhida Ben Cheikh, activist doctor
  • Alice Ball, inventor of a treatment for leprosy
  • Radhia Haddad, feminist activist
  • Anne Sylvestre, feminist singer
  • Pān Yùliáng, avant-garde artist
  • Maryse Bastié, conqueror of the air
  • Mariama Bâ, committed writer
  • Mafory Bangoura, independence activist
  • Dambisa Moyo, international aid specialist
  • Nice Nailantei Leng’ete, girls’ rights activist
  • Yi Xie, energy innovator
  • Anne-Marie Lagrange, discoverer of exoplanets
  • Quarraisha Abdool Karim, committed against HIV
  • Wilma Rudolph, sports monument
  • An Antane Kapesh, Innu writer and activist
  • Althea Gibson, tennis champion
  • Dolores Ibarruri, La Pasionaria
  • Alice Diamond and the Forty Thieves
  • Elizabeth Catlett, engaged artist
  • Tu Youyou, malaria researcher
  • Olivia Hooker, in search of justice
  • Maria Beasley, inventor
  • Stephanie St. Clair, gang leader
  • Jane Goodall, a woman among chimpanzees
  • Margaret Atwood, feminist writer
  • Nora Bernard, defender of the victims of colonization
  • Ogdo Aksënova, poet between two worlds
  • Viola Liuzzo, killed for her ideas
  • Bertina Lopes, Mozambican painter and sculptor
  • Mollie Kyle Cobb, Reign of Terror Survivor
  • Annie Lee Wilkerson Cooper, activist with a strong character
  • Pearl Gibbs, Aboriginal activist
  • Dinara Assanova, realist filmmaker
  • Yosano Akiko, feminist poet
  • Amelia Boynton Robinson, civil rights activist
  • Marietta Blau, Austrian physicist
  • Virginia Brindis de Salas, Uruguayan poet
  • Miriam Makeba, a voice against apartheid
  • Kenojuak Ashevak, Inuit artist
  • Gisella Perl, gynecologist at Auschwitz
  • Azellia White, aviation pioneer
  • Alda do Espírito Santo, independence activist
  • Ada Blackjack, arctic survivor
  • Urani Rumbo, Albanian feminist
  • Lucile Berkeley Buchanan, first graduate
  • Angela Sidney, Keeper of Traditions
  • Gisèle Halimi, human rights lawyer
  • Rachel Carson, marine biologist and environmentalist
  • Rose Lokissim, witness and elite soldier
  • Naziq al-Abid, feminist revolutionary
  • Mary Two-Axe Earley, women's rights activist
  • Mary Muthoni Nyanjiru, Kenyan heroine
  • Charlotte Perriand, architect and designer
  • Lin Huiyin, China's first architect
  • The Mirabal sisters, opponents of the dictatorship
  • Ella Baker, civil rights activist
  • Faith Bandler, Australian activist
  • Rosetta Tharpe, godmother of rock and roll
  • Musine Kokalari, writer and politician
  • Cicely Tyson, actress and icon
  • Lin Zhao, writer and martyr
  • Maryam Mirzakhani, first winner of the Fields Medal
  • First signs of life and dinosaurs
  • Australopithecus
  • Homo Habilis
  • Homo Erectus
  • Neanderthal man
  • modern man
  • From 10,000 to 2,000 BC. J.-C.:First civilizations in Mesopotamia
  • From 2000 to 1200 BC. J.-C.:Babylonian and Hittite empires
  • From 1195 to 926 BC. AD:Sea Peoples, Hebrews, Israel
  • From 883 to 627 BC. AD:Assyrian Empire
  • From 625 to 587 BC. AD:Babylon
  • From 559 to 146 BC. AD:Persian Empire
  • From 5 av. AD to 391 AD. J.-C.:Blossoming of Christianity
  • From 9000 to 3300 BC. J.-C.:Pre-dynastic period
  • From 3300 to 2778 BC. J.-C.:Thinite period
  • From 2778 to 2260 BC. AD:Old Kingdom
  • From 2200 to 2160 BC. AD:First Intermediate Period
  • From 2160 to 1785 BC. BC:Middle Kingdom
  • From 1785 to 1580 BC. AD:Second Intermediate Period
  • 1580 to 1085 BC:New Kingdom
  • From 1085 to 333 BC. J.-C.:Late period
  • From 332 to 30 BC. J.-C.:From the Greeks to the Romans, Cleopatra
  • From 2000 to 1200 BC. J.-C.:Mycenaean civilization
  • From 6000 to 1450 BC. J.-C.:Minoan civilization
  • From 1100 to 508 BC. J.-C.:Archaic period
  • From 490 to 347 BC. AD:Persian and Peloponnesian Wars
  • From 356 to 146 BC. AD:Alexander the Great
  • From 700 to 146 BC. J.-C.:Rome and the first Romans
  • From 100 to 30 BC. AD:Julius Caesar
  • From 29 BC. AD to 117 AD. J.-C.:Apogee of the Roman Empire
  • From 200 to 555 AD. J.-C.:Fall of Rome and evolution of Christianity
  • From 3500 to 1500 BC. AD:Indus Valley
  • From 1500 BC. AD to 535 AD. J.-C.:Empires Maurya and Gupta
  • From 10,000 to 2,500 BC. J.-C.:The first Europeans
  • From 700 to 100 BC. AD:The Scythians
  • From 800 BC. AD 43 AD. J.-C.:The Celts and the Gauls
  • From 406 to 476 AD. J.-C.:The Barbarian kingdoms
  • From 5000 to 551 BC. AD:Shang and Zhou Dynasties
  • From 15,000 BC. AD 550 AD. AD:North America
  • From 2000 BC. AD to 700 AD. AD:Ancient Peru
  • From 1200 to 400 BC. AD:The Olmecs
  • From 300 BC. AD to 750 AD. J.-C.:The Maya
  • From 400 to 1453:Byzantine Empire
  • From 410 to 1066:England of the Anglo-Saxons
  • From 450 to 900:The Kingdom of the Franks, Charlemagne
  • From 790 to 1100:Viking raids
  • 936 to 1291:The Holy Roman Empire
  • From 911 to 1204:The Normans and Normandy
  • From 570 to 634:Muhammad and the foundation of Islam
  • From 634 to 790:The Islamic Empire
  • 41. History of the Roman Catholic Church
  • 42. Major Doctrines and Teachings of the Roman Catholic Church
  • 43. Pope
  • 36. Last Day on the Island of Java
  • 31. Conflict between Religion and Science
  • 32. Rise of Sects Apart from Catholicism
  • 33. Discrimination and Exploitation in European Society
  • 34. Rise of Democratic Ideas in Europe
  • 35. Rise of Nationalism in Europe
  • 36. The End of the Second Edition of the Holy Roman Empire
  • 37. Unification of Italy
  • 38. Benito Mussolini, the hero of fascism
  • 39. Fascist-Nazi Brother-Brother
  • 40. Establishment of Modern Republic in Italy
  • 21. First Edition of the Holy Roman Empire
  • 22. Holy Roman Empire Second Edition
  • 23. Development of the Gothic Style of the Churches
  • 24. The Dilemma of the City of Venice
  • 25. Crusade of the Cross against Hilal
  • 26. The climax of the conflict between the Pope and the Holy Roman Emperor
  • 27. Establishment of the Inquisition by the Christian Union
  • 28. Pushing the Pope's Reputation
  • 29. End of the Eastern Roman Empire
  • 30. Beginning of the Renaissance era in Italy
  • 11. Rulers of the Great Roman Empire
  • 12. Two Augustus and Two Caesars
  • 13. Execution of Christians in the Roman Empire
  • 14. Partition of the Great Roman Empire
  • 15. Western Roman Empire
  • 16. Eastern Roman Empire
  • 17. The Conflict of Christianity
  • 18. Appearance of the Pope and his extension of power
  • 19. The Sad End of the Great Roman Empire
  • 20. Second Edition of the Great Roman Empire
  • 1. India Italy of Europe
  • 2. Repubblica Italiana
  • 3. Establishment and Expansion of Roman Civilization
  • 4. Ancient Religion of Rome
  • 5. Establishment of the Pythagorean Brotherhood in Italy
  • 6. Great Roman Republic
  • 7. Moral Decline of the Roman Republic
  • 8. Julius Caesar and Cleopatra
  • 9. Rise of the Great Roman Empire
  • 10. Crucifixion of Jesus Christ
  • 6. Day 5 in Rome – 21 May 2019
  • 7. Day 1 in Florence – 22 May 2019
  • 8. Day 2 in Florence – 23 May 2019
  • 9. A Day in Pisa
  • 10. Day 3 in Florence – 24 May 2019
  • 11. Day 1 in Venezia – 25 May 2019
  • 12. Day 2 in Venezia – 26 May 2019
  • 13. Day 3 in Venezia – 27 May 2019
  • 14. Last day on Italian soil – 28 May 2019
  • authorship
  • 32. Gambira Loka Zoo
  • 33. Ration Search
  • 34. Departure from Yogyakarta
  • 35. Three days in Indonesia's capital Jakarta
  • authorship
  • 1. Towards the navel of the world
  • 2. Day 1 in Rome – 17 May 2019
  • 3. Day 2 in Rome – 18 May 2019
  • 4. Day 3 in Rome – 19 May 2019
  • 5. Day 4 in Rome – 20 May 2019
  • 22. Taman Ayun Puradesa
  • 23. Towards Tanahlot Temple
  • 24. Glorious procession of Gulangan festival
  • 25. Day 3 in Bali Island
  • 26. Fourth Day in Bali Island
  • 27. Five Days on the Island of Java
  • 28. Day 2 on the island of Java
  • 29. Parambanan Shiva Temple
  • 30. Day 3 on the island of Java
  • 31. Huge mountain-like architectural structure
  • 12. Borobudur Buddhist Chaitya and Vihara
  • 13. Chandi Borobudur
  • 14. Temples of Jakarta
  • 15. Temples of Bali Island
  • 16. Ubud-Vanar-Forest Temples and God Statues
  • 17. Eleven Days on Bali and Java Islands
  • 18. Five Days on the Island of Bali
  • 19. First Day in Bali Island
  • 20. Day 2 in Bali Island
  • 21. Taman Ram Sita
  • 2. Early History of the Island of Java
  • 3. Sri Vijaya Dynasty of Buddhism in Sumatra
  • 4. Culture of Muslims of Indonesian Islands
  • 5. Competition in Europe for trade from the Spice Islands
  • 6. Freedom Struggle of Indonesia
  • 7. Growth of Hindu Civilization in Bali Island
  • 8. Present day Bali
  • 9. Major Hindu and Buddhist Temples of Indonesia
  • 10.Parambanan Shiva Temple Group
  • 11. Plaosan Buddhist Temple
  • Why can't there be friendship with India?
  • Identity crisis for Pakistanis
  • some unanswered questions
  • Reference List – How Pakistan Was Formed
  • Preface
  • 1. Mythological references to the Indonesian islands
  • Pakistan's army is the biggest enemy of Pakistan
  • Killing of Hindus in the name of religion and Muslims in the name of language in East Pakistan
  • West-Pakistan army killed three million Bengalis and Biharis
  • There is no place in Pakistan for people of other religions.
  • Massacre of Ahmadiyya Muslims in Pakistan
  • Shias wiped out in Pakistan
  • History of Bloody Attacks on Sufi Dargahs in Pakistan
  • The difference between the lives of the Deendars and the Sayyids
  • What kind of Pakistan is this!
  • The process of death and migration continues
  • Tribal invasion in Kashmir
  • Pakistani web on Maharaja of Bikaner
  • ahead of pakistan
  • Jinnah's Pakistan vs Pakistan's Jinnah!
  • Jinnah wanted to return to India!
  • Partition of Pakistan Muslim League
  • disillusioned with pakistan
  • Pakistan of Jinnah's successors
  • India-Pakistan went away from each other
  • Pakistan's water in danger
  • Conspiracy to merge Jodhpur State with Pakistan (4)
  • Conspiracy to merge Jodhpur State with Pakistan (5)


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