「British?」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)13ページ目
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Kathryn Hughes is a | British historian, biographer and journalist. |
For the | British historian, see Mark Connelly. |
Julian T. Jackson (born 1954) is a prominent | British historian. |
1959) is a | British historian. |
Michael Jones (born 5 December 1940) is a | British historian. |
y Noble Frankland DFC, (1922-), D.Phil., is a | British historian. |
John Morrill FBA (born 1946) is a | British historian. |
British historian; the first chairman, appointed in 1 | |
Source: C. Cook and B. Keith, | British Historical Facts 1830-1900 |
Kate Allan (born 1975) is | British historical romance novelist. |
C. Cook and B. Keith, | British Historical Facts 1830-1900 |
British historical cinema: the history, heritage and | |
Keith Jenkins is a | British historiographer. |
The Discovery of Islands: Essays in | British History (2005)** |
The Naval Side of | British History (1924) |
The Oxford Companion to Black | British History |
gious Houses - House of Knights hospitallers: | British History Online |
Briercliffe-with-Extwistle Township - | British History Online |
Victoria County History at | British History Online |
official | British history and co-authored by Sir Charles Webste |
Hardy's Descriptive Cat. of MS. Materials for | British History, ii. |
Great Tales from | British History, Volume 2 (2005) |
He was the author of the Companion to | British History. |
In 1954 she published Studies in Early | British History. |
The Columbia Companion to | British History. |
Lindman played for Cardiff Devils in the | British Hockey League. |
and the | British Holiday and Home Parks Association (BH&HPA). |
British Home Championship (shared): 1939 | |
The 1891 | British Home Championship was an international footba |
The 1899 | British Home Championship was an international footba |
For the | British home improvement store chain, see Homebase. |
The 1888 | British Home Championship was the fifth edition of th |
The 1887 | British Home Championship was the fourth internationa |
The 1894 | British Home Championship was an edition of the annua |
The 1900 | British Home Championship was an edition of the annua |
British Home Championship | |
The 1893 | British Home Championship was an international footba |
23/02/1889 - | British Home Championship - Stoke: England - Wales 4- |
British Home Championship Winner: 1930 | |
1907 | British Home Championship (March 16 - April 6, 1907) |
Scotland were winners of the 1896 | British Home Championship. |
The battleship was part of the | British Home Fleet during Eto's assignment and remain |
See Also: 1884 | British Home Championship |
British Home Defences 1940-45. | |
The 1892 | British Home Championship was an edition of the annua |
The 1896 | British Home Championship was an edition of the annua |
The 1898 | British Home Championship was the fifteenth edition o |
The 1886 | British Home Championship was the third annual intern |
Scotland were winners of the 1897 | British Home Championship. |
The 1895 | British Home Championship was an international footba |
The Confederate Settlements in | British Honduras are a cultural and ethnic sub-group |
John Burdon (1866-1933), Governor-General of | British Honduras |
Belize, once known as | British Honduras. |
Previously, the nation had competed as | British Honduras. |
It replaced the | British Honour system after 1997. |
British Honours | |
'An Appeal to | British Hop Planters,' London, 1805 |
Peter B. Wills, | British Horological Institute) |
Dooley portrayed Kieran in the | British horror film Salvage. |
For the | British horror comics series, see Scream!. |
British Horror Cinema. | |
The Devil's Chair is a 2006 | British horror film. |
It is a | British Horse Society Approved Livery Yard and a memb |
British Horse Driving Trials Association | |
Together with the | British Horseracing Authority and the Thoroughbred Br |
This article is about the | British horticulturalist. |
For the | British horticulturist, see Henry Eckford (horticultu |
"First test-tube baby born in | British hospital". |
1956), | British hostage and journalist |
Forte Group plc was a | British hotel and restaurant company. |
The Skylon was developed from the | British HOTOL project. |
Its representatives sat in the | British House of Commons. |
Thetford was a constituency of the | British House of Commons. |
Shereen Miranda is a | British house singer songwriter. |
onets both represented Linlithgowshire in the | British House of Commons while the third Baronet was |
ed for minimum space standards in newly built | British houses after research was published suggestin |
Energy efficiency in | British housing |
See also: Energy efficiency in | British housing. |
Griffon Hoverwork Ltd is a | British hovercraft designer and manufacturer. |
Sunk in Palermo by | British human torpedo attack in 1943. |
She is a distinguished supporter of the | British Humanist Association. |
He is a distinguished supporter of the | British Humanist Association. |
Clapham is a Distinguished Supporter of the | British Humanist Association. |
Viscount Falkland is a supporter of the | British Humanist Association. |
She is a Distinguished Supporter of the | British Humanist Association. |
Jim Herrick (born 1944) is a | British Humanist and secularist. |
He is a Distinguished Supporter of the | British Humanist Association. |
For the | british humanitarian Tom Henderson, OBE, see ShelterB |
For the | British humour writer, see Tom Cox (writer). |
He published "A history of the | British hydroid zoophytes" (1868) and "A history of t |
British I Corps - Lieutenant-General Michael Barker | |
British Ice Hockey Writer's Association Player of the | |
He was awarded the | British Ice Hockey Writers Association British Netmin |
The Warwick and Coventry Panthers are a | British ice hockey team that play in the First and Th |
Inducted to | British Ice Hockey Hall of Fame in 2004. |
Founded: 2000 into the | British Ice Hockey Superleague |
This article is about the | British ice hockey player. |
The Peterborough Islanders are a | British ice hockey team. |
Today, Ironbridge is one of the 21 | British icons. |
Lee O'Connor is a | British illustrator and comics artist. |
Haganah also organized demonstrations against | British immigration quotas. |
Brigitte Askonas, FRS, is a | British immunologist. |
Unlike other major | British imperial thread standards (British Standard W |
Paul Burling is a | British impressionist. |
They were mapped more extensively by the | British in 1660. |
British in Burma (Encyclopaedia Britannica) | |
He fought against the | British in the Second Boer War. |
The railway station was built by the | British in 1886. |
They helped the | British in Mesopotamia by preventing the ... |
This treaty was used by the | British in later conflicts with the French to assert |
came known as Flagstaff Fort; captured by the | British in 1776, it remained in British hands until t |
The | British in Africa (with Yvonne Foy, 1971) - American |
Lincoln surrendered to the | British in 1780 in South Carolina and in 1781 accepte |
alpara district was originally created by the | British in 1876. |
The fortress was raided by the | British in 1818 and came under the control of the Bri |
Yaqub signed the Treaty of Gandamak with the | British in May 1879, relinquishing control of Afghani |
Dheeran Chinnamalai was hanged by the | British in this fort. |
The team is mainly | British, including the world and Olympic track medall |
British Independent Film Award for Best Actress (Mort | |
British Independent Film Awards, UK - Best Director - | |
British Independent Film Awards, UK - Best Actress - | |
The 9th | British Independent Film Awards, held in November 200 |
Wiiija was a | British independent record label. |
2008 Nominated - | British Independent Film Awards - "Best Performance b |
stival Special Jury award as well as the 2005 | British Independent Film Award for Best British Docum |
British Independent Film Awards 2005 - Gypo Outstandi | |
The 10th | British Independent Film Awards, held in November 200 |
Award for Best Original Screenplay and won a | British Independent Film Award for "Best Independent |
British India is shown in pink on this 1837 map. | |
estern Provinces, an administrative region in | British India |
1 January - | British India officially adopts Indian Standard Time. |
Business, Race and Politics in | British India c.1860-1960. |
D'Mello was born in Puthur, Mangalore, | British India in 1922. |
He died at Bengal, | British India in January 1887. |
Sir Henry Lawrence, soldier/statesman in | British India |
Aryans and | British India (1997) |
Blowing from Guns in | British India (1884) by Vasily Vereshchagin. |
The History of | British India (1826 edition) online at libertyfund.or |
The weapon carried was the | British India Pattern Musket. |
Badal Gupta, a Bengali revolutionary in | British India |
Leslie DBE (born 28 January 1941, Rawalpindi, | British India) is a British journalist who currently |
Indarjit Singh CBE (born 1932, Rawalpindi, | British India), sometimes transliterated Inderjit Sin |
CB, CBE, DSO, QGM (born 1940 in what was then | British India), often known as Mike Rose, is a retire |
Rhynchota :The Fauna of | British India, Including Ceylon and Burma |
The Fauna of | British India, Including Ceylon and Burma. |
1889: The Fauna of | British India, Including Ceylon and Burma. |
Calcutta, Bengal, | British India, 28 October 1930; d. |
For the country, see | British India. |
Bingham, C. T. (1905) Fauna of | British India. |
Bingham, C. T. (1907) Fauna of | British India. |
Fauna of | British India. |
The Central Provinces was a province of | British India. |
in painted several scenes of imperial rule in | British India. |
All songs written and composed by | British India. |
Chakrabarty was born in Dhaka, | British India. |
Josh was born in Malihabad, United Provinces, | British India. |
The Prince of Wales visits | British India. |
Indraneil Sengupta as Mohan Kant, the | British Indian |
e were initially resisted by III Corps of the | British Indian Army and several British Army battalio |
British, Indian and Australian soldiers were captured | |
7.8% are Indian or | British Indian |
Main articles: | British Indian and Indian community of London |
supported various amphibious landings of the | British Indian Army and the British Army in Burma, Ma |
Messervy was the only | British Indian Army officer to command a British divi |
Diego Garcia, | British Indian Ocean Territory |
British Indian Ocean Territory | |
Following Kitchener's reforms, the | British Indian Army was "the force recruited locally |
The Neuve-Chapelle Indian Memorial of the | British Indian Army. |
His father Ramsahay Dwivedi was in | British Indian Army. |
It was established by the | British Indian Army in 19th century British India, an |
ent Parsons, KCIE, CBE, DSO (1884-1966) was a | British Indian Army officer and administrator in Brit |
For the | British indie group, see Th' Faith Healers. |
British indie band The Kooks named themselves after t | |
One NIght Only, | British Indie Band. |
Jack Mitchell (drummer), drummer of | British indie band Haven |
New Rhodes were a | British indie-pop four-piece. |
Vienna) is a | British industrial designer of Czech origin. |
For the | British industrialist, see Robert Renwick, 1st Baron |
William Clarke (1831-1890) was an important | British industrialist. |
HMC Schools and | British Industry, 1981 |
British influence was still immense in Iraq. | |
British influences include roast beef and roast chick | |
The | British initially ordered 8,500 in 1942. |
A Handbook of | British Inland Birds (1906) |
1865 A Catalogue of | British Insects in all the Orders. |
The observer's book of common | British insects and spiders (1953) |
Phil Packer MBE - Founder of the | British Inspiration Trust (3) |
1994 Elected a Fellow of the ( | British) Institute of Management |
Companion of the | British Institute of Management (1980) |
Vice President, | British Institute of International and Comparative La |
as an archeologist, following the work of the | British Institute in Amman for Archaeological Researc |
He was President of the | British Institute of Radiology. |
the Royal Academy, between 1837 and 1884, the | British Institution (1841-60), and the Society of Bri |
ad many works exhibited at the Royal Academy, | British Institution and Society of British Artists in |
; Exhibition Catalogues of the Royal Academy, | British Institution (Living Artists), Society of Brit |
t the Royal Academy from 1842 onwards, at the | British Institution, and with the Royal British Acade |
British Insulated Cables had its origins in 1890 in t | |
British Insulated Callender's Cables was formed in 19 | |
British intellectual, friend of Thomas Becket. | |
Gordon Jackson - | British intelligence operative, Bruce |
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