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English Wikipedia references for Thebritishmuseum.ac.uk 101-120 of 227
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Stanwick Iron Age Fortifications
Stanwick Iron Age Fortifications (also known as 'Stanwick Camp'), a huge Iron Age hill fort comprising over 9 kilometers (6 miles) of ditches and ramparts enclosing approximately 300 hectares (700 acres) of land, are situated in Richmondshire, North Yorkshire, England.
Stanwick_Iron_Age_Fortifications
Kourion
Kourion (), also Curias (Pliny v. 13) or Latin:Curium, was a city in Cyprus, which endured from antiquity until the early Middle Ages. Kourion is situated on the south shores of the island to the west of the river Lycus (now called Kouris), 16 M. P. from Amathus. (Peut. Tab.), and was recorded by numerous ancient authors including Ptolemy (v. 14. § 2), Stephanus of Byzantium, Hierocles, and Pliny the Elder.
Kourion
Alexander Walker (critic)
Alexander Walker (23 March 1930 - 15 July 2003) was a film critic, born in Portadown, Northern Ireland. He worked for the Birmingham Post in the 1950s, before becoming film critic of the London Evening Standard in 1960, a role he held until his death in 2003.
Alexander_Walker_(critic)
WoodElf/Archive1
User_talk:WoodElf/Archive1
Cassiobury Park
Cassiobury Park is the principal public open space in Watford, Hertfordshire, in England. It comprises over and extends from the A412 Rickmansworth Road in the east to the Grand Union Canal in the west.The area occupied by the park and the housing developments to its north and south was formerly the estate of the Earls of Essex.
Cassiobury_Park
List of largest empires
This article provides a list of the largest empires in world history.
List_of_largest_empires
History of jewellery in Ukraine
Talk:History_of_jewellery_in_Ukraine
List of largest empires
Talk:List_of_largest_empires
Warren Cup
Talk:Warren_Cup
Utagawa Kunimasa
Utagawa Kunimasa(歌川 国政)(1773-1810) was a Japanese ukiyo-e printmaker and student of Utagawa Toyokuni. Originally from Aizu in Iwashiro province, he first worked in a dye shop upon arriving in Edo (now Tokyo). It was there that he was noticed by Toyokuni, to whom he became apprenticed.Kunimasa is especially known for his yakusha-e prints (役者絵, portraits of kabuki actors) and for his bijinga (美人画, pictures of beautiful women).
Utagawa_Kunimasa
Chagar Bazar
Chagar Bazar is an ancient site in northern Syria, occupied from the sixth to the second millennium BC. It is situated by the small river Dara, a tributary to the Khabur River. Alternative spellings are Tell Chagar Bazar, or Šagir Bazar.Chagar Bazar was already settled in the Neolithic.
Chagar_Bazar
Georg Gerster
George Gerster (born 30 April 1928) is a journalist and a pioneer aerial photographer. Born in Winterthur, in 1950 Gerster earned a doctorate at the University of Zurich in Germanistik. Through 1956 he worked as an editor for the inhabitants of Zurich's "World Week". Since then he has been active as a freelance journalist with an emphasis on science reporting and flight photography.
Georg_Gerster
Hoxne hoard
Hoxne_hoard
Burney Relief
Talk:Burney_Relief
Tamassos
Tamassos (Greek:ancient city-state of great archaeological significance in the central vicinity of Cyprus, located approximately 21 kilometeres south-west of the capital city of Nicosia.
Tamassos
Snettisham Hoard
The Snettisham Hoard, Snettisham Treasure or Snettisham Torc, is a series of discoveries of Iron Age precious metal, found in the Snettisham area of the English county of Norfolk between 1948 to 1973. The hoard consists of metal, jet and over 150 gold torques fragments, over 70 of which form complete torcs, dating from BC 70. Though the origins are unknown, it is of a quality to have been the royal treasury of the Iceni.
Snettisham_Hoard
Shabaka Stone
Shabaka Stone is a relic from the Twenty-fifth Dynasty of Egypt. It is a stone slab measuring 66hieroglyphs of a worm-ridden, decaying papyrus. This papyrus was found as pharaoh Shabaka was inspecting the temple of Ptah in Memphis, Egypt.The Pharaoh Shabaka, concerned about the loss of the information on the papyrus, had the rest of the text written into this stone.
Shabaka_Stone
Porta Pia
Porta Pia is a gate in the Aurelian Walls of Rome. Italy. One of Pope Pius IV's civic improvements to the city, it is named after him. Situated at the end of a new street, the Via Pia, it was designed by Michelangelo in replacement for the Porta Nomentana situated several hundred meters southwards, which was closed up at the same time.
Porta_Pia
Garzo/archive/2005-11-23-2006-05-23
User_talk:Garzo/archive/2005-11-23-2006-05-23
Malpas, Cheshire
Talk:Malpas,_Cheshire