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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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