Category
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Wannsee Conference
1942 meeting of senior officials and functionaries of National Socialist organisations and ministries in Berlin to organise and coordinate the deportation of the entire Jewish population of Europe to the East for extermination

Hebrew Bible
Ancient Hebrew Sacred Text
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Ripon
Ripon () is a cathedral city and civil parish in North Yorkshire, England. Located at the confluence of two tributaries of the River Ure, the Laver and Skell.
Mount Abu
hill station in Sirohi district of Rajasthan state in western India
luminiferous aether
postulated medium for the propagation of light
Emblem of China
National emblem of the People's Republic of China
kraken
thumb|A "colossal octopus" attacking ship, Wash (visual arts)|pen and wash by Pierre Denys-Montfort, engraved by Étienne Claude Voysard, 1801

hygrometer
thumb|A hair tension dial hygrometer with a nonlinear scale.

mass for the dead
thumb|Requiem for Cirilo Almario|Bishop Cirilo Almario, in the [[Mass of Paul VI at Minor Basilica and Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, Malolos, Bulacan, 2016]]
thumb|The Requiem, in the Tridentine Mass, celebrated annually for [[Louis XVI and victims of the French Revolution, in the crypt of Strasbourg Cathedral, 2013]]
thumb|270px|Requiem Mass for Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria at St. Catherine's Cathedral, [[St. Petersburg, published in a Russian newspaper, 1914]]
Languages with official status in India
languages designated official status by the Constitution of India
Robert K. Merton
American sociologist (1910–2003)
history of Romania
history of Romania, a country in Eastern Europe
Yang di-Pertuan Agong
head of state and elective constitutional monarch of Malaysia

demiurge
In the Platonic, Neopythagorean, Middle Platonic, and Neoplatonic schools of philosophy, the Demiurge () is an artisan-like figure responsible for fashioning and maintaining the physical universe. Various schools of Gnostics adopted the term demiurge.
Hudson County
county in New Jersey, United States

The Mysterious Island
1874 novel by Jules Verne
Italian Renaissance
cultural movement from the 14th to 17th century

scribe
thumb|upright|''Portrait of the Scribe Mir 'Abd Allah Katib in the Company of a Youth Burnishing Paper'' (Mughal Empire, ca. 1602)
A scribe is a person who serves as a professional copyist, especially one who made copies of manuscripts before the invention of automatic printing.

As-Saffah
Abu al-ʿAbbās Abd Allāh ibn Muḥammad ibn ʿAlī ibn ʿAbd Allāh ibn al-ʿAbbās (‎; 721/722 – 8 June 754), known by his laqab al-Saffah (), was the first caliph of the Abbasid Caliphate, one of the longest and most important caliphates in Islamic history.
trailer
advertisement for a feature film

Albert II of Germany
King of Germany, Hungary and Bohemia
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Laki
Laki () or Lakagígar (, Craters of Laki) is a volcanic fissure in the western part of Vatnajökull National Park, Iceland, not far from the volcanic fissure of Eldgjá and the small village of Kirkjubæjarklaustur. The fissure is properly referred to as Lakagígar, while Laki is a mountain that the fissure bisects. Lakagígar is part of a volcanic system centered on the volcano Grímsvötn and including the volcano Þórðarhyrna. It lies between the glaciers of Mýrdalsjökull and Vatnajökull, in an area of fissures that run in a southwest to northeast direction.
Piracicaba
Piracicaba ( ) is a Brazilian municipality located in the interior of São Paulo state, in the Southeast Region of Brazil. It serves as the main city of the Metropolitan Region of Piracicaba (RMP) and is situated approximately northwest of the state capital, São Paulo. Covering an area of just over , with around classified as urban area, Piracicaba has a population of 438,827 inhabitants, making it the 13th most populous municipality in São Paulo state.

In Praise of Folly
1509 essay by Desiderius Erasmus

Peter I of Serbia
Serbian noble (1844–1921); King of Serbia from 1903 to 1918
military–industrial complex
concept in sociology and military and political science
Aran Islands
group of three islands on the west coast of Ireland
January Uprising
Polish national uprising against the Russian occupation of the former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth
Tristan und Isolde
opera by Richard Wagner
eau de cologne
class of perfume concentration of between 2-6%
Operation Torch
1942 Allied landing operations in French North Africa during World War II

A Doll's House
1879 play by Henrik Ibsen

Little Women
1869 novel by Louisa May Alcott

Dayananda Saraswati
Indian social reformer (1824-1883)
contemporary philosophy
current period in the history of Western philosophy
Blenheim Palace
country house near Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England, UK
Zeno's paradoxes
set of philosophical problems
Folketing
The Folketing ( , ), also known as the Parliament of Denmark or the Danish Parliament in English, is the unicameral national legislature (parliament) of the Kingdom of Denmark — Denmark proper together with the Faroe Islands and Greenland. Established in 1849, the Folketing was the lower house of the bicameral parliament called the Rigsdag until 1953; the upper house was the Landsting.
Biblical Hebrew
archaic form of the Hebrew language
1973 Chilean coup d'état
military overthrow of the Popular Unity coalition government in 1973 in Chile
Popol Vuh
sacred text of the Maya
Cairo
city in Illinois, United States
Puebloan peoples
Native Americans in the Southwestern United States
Maria II of Portugal
Queen of Portugal (r. 1826–1828; 1834–1853)
Prince Edward Islands
sub-Antarctic islands belonging to South Africa
God Bless Our Homeland Ghana
Ghana National Anthem
Monastery of Saint John of Rila
Eastern Orthodox monastery in Bulgaria
David Irving
British author and Holocaust denier (born 1938)
Headquarters of the United Nations
group of buildings in New York City
Magnus Maximus
late 4th-century Roman emperor of Britain and usurper of the West
Durand Line
border between Afghanistan and Pakistan
Russian Liberation Army
Nazi German military unit mostly composed of Soviet defectors in World War II
Franklin County
county in Arkansas, United States
comfort woman
military sexual slavery system designed and implemented by Japan Empire from early 1930s until the end of World War II, or the victims who were forced into sexual slavery by the Japanese military
Nokor Reach
national anthem of Cambodia
Lincoln Cathedral
cathedral located in Lincoln in England

Cévennes
The Cévennes ( , ; ) is a cultural region and range of mountains in south-central France, on the south-east edge of the Massif Central. It covers parts of the départements of Ardèche, Gard, Hérault and Lozère. Rich in geographical, natural, and cultural significance, portions of the region are protected within the Cévennes National Park, the Cévennes Biosphere Reserve (UNESCO), as well as a UNESCO World Heritage Site: Causses and the Cévennes, Mediterranean agro-pastoral Cultural Landscape. The area has been inhabited since 400,000 BCE and has numerous megaliths which were erected beginning ar
Treaty of Nystad
August 1721 peace treaty between Russia and Sweden
The Sun Also Rises
novel by Ernest Hemingway
Symposium
philosophical text by Plato