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− | __NOTOC__
| + | {|cellspacing ="3" style ="margin-top:10px"|- valign="top" |
− | [[File:Banner.jpg|link=]]
| + | |width="30%" class="MainPageBG" style="border: 1px solid #cccccc; color: #000;| |
| + | <div style="clear: left; text-align: left; float: left; padding: .4em .9em .9em"> |
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| + | <div style="padding: .4em .9em .9em; border: 1px solid #ffce85; color: #000; background-color: #fff8ed; font-size:100%;"> |
| + | '''Articles''' |
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− | <div class="portal" style="width:85%;">
| + | {{#dpl:category=Wikis|ordermethod=firstedit|order=descending|count=300}} |
− | ==[[Was Elizabeth I Justified in having her Cousin Mary Stuart, Queen of Scotland Executed?]]==
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− | '''Featured Article'''
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− | [[File:Elizabeth_I_when_a_Princess.jpg|left|thumb|170px]]
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− | When studying the lives of Elizabeth I and her rival cousin Mary Stuart, modern interpretations paint a fairly definitive picture of their perceived personalities. Elizabeth’s character is revealed through titles such as ''Elizabeth I, Red Rose of the House of Tudor'' by Katherine Lasky, ''Elizabeth I: Queen of England’s'' Golden Age by Paul Hilliam, or Clark Hulse’s Elizabeth: Ruler and Legend.
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− | {{Read more|Was Elizabeth I Justified in having her Cousin Mary Stuart, Queen of Scotland Executed?}}
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− | </div>
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− | ==[[How has the Role of Horses Changed in Human Societies?]]==
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− | '''Featured Article'''
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− | [[File:Britishmuseumassyrianrelieftwohorsemennimrud.jpg|left|thumb|150px]]
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− | The horse today is often seen as an animal useful for recreation, sport, transport, and work. The nature of the horse, however, has changed in different societies across time. Sometimes horses were seen as war animals, while in other places and periods there use was the privy of royalty.
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− | {{Read more|How has the Role of Horses Changed in Human Societies?}}
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− | ==[[How Did the German Military Develop Blitzkrieg?]]==
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− | '''Featured Article'''
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− | [[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1981-070-15, Frankreich, Panzer IV.jpg||left|thumb|150px]]
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− | The early German victories in Poland, Norway, France, the Low Countries, the Balkans, North Africa, and Russia form an impressive list of military triumphs. What was more, these triumphs were accomplished with great speed and fairly modest cost to the Germans. Indeed, these victories were so striking that they gave rise to the myth of German military supremacy—a myth that has persisted to this day.
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− | {{Read more|How Did the German Military Develop Blitzkrieg?}}
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− | </div>
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− | <div class="portal">
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− | ==[[Why Was Vicksburg “The Gibraltar of the Confederacy?”]]==
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− | '''Featured Article'''
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− | [[File:Battle_of_Vicksburg,_Kurz_and_Allison.png|left|thumb|150px]]
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− | As the calendar flipped from June to July in 1863 Gettysburg, a small market town founded in the soft, rolling hills of south central Pennsylvania on Samuel Gettys farm half a century before, was unknown to most Americans. Four days later, on July 4, it had become "The Most Famous Small Town in America," as boosters would come to call it.
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− | {{Read more|Why Was Vicksburg “The Gibraltar of the Confederacy?”]}}
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− | </div>
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− | <div class="portal">
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− | ==[[How did Medicine develop in the Ancient World?]]==
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− | '''Featured Article'''
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− | [[File:626px-Edwin_Smith_Papyrus_v2_copy.jpg|left|thumb|150px]]
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− | As the calendar flipped from June to July in 1863 Gettysburg, a small market town founded in the soft, rolling hills of south central Pennsylvania on Samuel Gettys farm half a century before, was unknown to most Americans. Four days later, on July 4, it had become "The Most Famous Small Town in America," as boosters would come to call it.
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− | {{Read more|How did Medicine develop in the Ancient World?]}}
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− | </div>
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− | <div class="portal">
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− | ==Articles==
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− | These are our interviews with historians discussing their new books.
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− | {{#dpl:category=Wikis|ordermethod=firstedit|order=descending|count=15}} | |
| </div> | | </div> |
| + | |} |