[nil edit] The Biography Portal
A biography, or simply bio, is a detailed description of a person's life. It involves more than just the basic facts like education, work, relationships, and death; it portrays a person's experience of these life events. Unlike a profile or curriculum vitae (résumé), a biography presents a subject's life story, highlighting various aspects of his or her life, including intimate details of experience, and may include an analysis of the subject's personality.
Biographical works are usually non-fiction, but fiction can also be used to portray a person's life. One in-depth form of biographical coverage is called legacy writing. Works in diverse media, from literature to film, form the genre known as biography.
An authorized biography is written with the permission, cooperation, and at times, participation of a subject or a subject's heirs. An autobiography is written by the person himself or herself, sometimes with the assistance of a collaborator or ghostwriter.
Charles Stewart, PC (August 26, 1868 – December 6, 1946) was a Canadian politician who served as the third Premier of Alberta from 1917 until 1921. Born in Strabane, Ontario, in Wentworth County, Stewart was a farmer who moved west to Alberta after his farm was destroyed by a storm. There he became active in politics and was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta in the 1909 election. He served as Minister of Public Works and Minister of Municipal Affairs—the first person to hold the latter position in Alberta—in the government of Arthur Sifton. When Sifton left provincial politics in 1917 to join the federal cabinet, Stewart was named his replacement. As premier, Stewart tried to hold together his Liberal Party, which was divided by the Conscription Crisis of 1917. He endeavoured to enforce prohibition of alcoholic beverages, which had been enshrined in law by a referendum during Sifton's premiership, but found that the law was not widely enough supported to be effectively policed. His government took over several of the province's financially troubled railroads, and guaranteed bonds sold to fund irrigation projects. Several of these policies were the result of lobbying by the United Farmers of Alberta (UFA), with which Stewart enjoyed good relations; even so, the UFA was politicized during Stewart's premiership and ran candidates in the 1921 election. Unable to match the UFA's appeal to rural voters, Stewart's government was defeated at the polls and he was succeeded as premier by Herbert Greenfield.
James Baird Weaver (June 12, 1833 – February 6, 1912) was a member of the United States House of Representatives and two-time candidate for President of the United States. Born in Ohio, he moved to Iowa as a boy when his family claimed a homestead on the frontier. He became politically active as a young man and was an advocate for farmers and laborers. He joined and quit several political parties in the furtherance of the progressive causes in which he believed. After serving in the Union Army in the American Civil War, Weaver returned to Iowa and worked for the election of Republican candidates. After several unsuccessful attempts at Republican nominations to various offices, and growing dissatisfied with the conservative wing of the party, in 1877 Weaver switched to the Greenback Party, which supported increasing the money supply and regulating big business. As a Greenbacker with Democratic support, Weaver won election to the House in 1878. The Greenbackers nominated Weaver for president in 1880, but he received only 3.3 percent of the popular vote. After several more attempts at elected office, he was again elected to the House in 1884 and 1886. In Congress, he worked for expansion of the money supply and for the opening of Indian Territory to white settlement. As the Greenback Party fell apart, a new anti-big business third party, the People's Party ("Populists"), arose. Weaver helped to organize the party and was their nominee for president in 1892. This time he was more successful and gained 8.5 percent of the popular vote and won five states, but still fell far short of victory. The Populists merged with the Democrats by the end of the 19th century, and Weaver went with them, promoting the candidacy of William Jennings Bryan for president in 1896, 1900, and 1908. After serving as mayor of his home town, Colfax, Iowa, Weaver retired from his pursuit of elective office. He died in Iowa in 1912. Most of Weaver's political goals remained unfulfilled at his death, but many came to pass in the following decades.
Thierry Daniel Henry ( French pronunciation: [tjɛʁi ɑ̃ʁi]; born 17 August 1977) is a French professional football coach and former player who is currently the manager of Major League Soccer club Montreal Impact. He is considered one of the greatest strikers of all time and has often been debated as the greatest player in the history of the Premier League. In 2003 and 2004, Henry was the runner-up for the FIFA World Player of the Year, and was runner-up for the Ballon d'Or in the former year. He was named the PFA Players' Player of the Year twice, the FWA Footballer of the Year three times, and was named in the PFA Team of the Year six consecutive times. He was also included in the FIFA FIFPro World XI once and the UEFA Team of the Year five times. Formerly a figurehead for Nike, he was one of the most commercially marketed footballers during the 2000s. Henry made his professional debut with Monaco in 1994 before signing for defending Serie A champions Juventus. However, limited playing time, coupled with disagreements with the club's hierarchy, led to him signing for English Premier League club Arsenal for £11 million in 1999. Under long-time mentor and coach Arsène Wenger, Henry became a prolific striker and Arsenal's all-time leading scorer with 228 goals in all competitions. He won the Premier League Golden Boot a record four times, won two FA Cups and two Premier League titles with the club, including one during an unbeaten season dubbed The Invincibles. He spent his final two seasons with Arsenal as club captain, leading them to the 2006 UEFA Champions League Final. In June 2007, he transferred to Barcelona. In the 2008–09 season, Henry was a key part of the club's historic treble when they won La Liga, the Copa del Rey and the UEFA Champions League. In 2010, he joined New York Red Bulls of Major League Soccer (MLS), but returned to Arsenal on loan for two months in 2012, before retiring in 2014.
Mukerji promoting Hichki in 2018 Rani Mukerji (pronounced [rɑ:niː mʊkhərdʒiː]; born 21 March 1978) is an Indian film actress. The recipient of such accolades as seven Filmfare Awards, her roles have been cited in the media as a significant departure from previous screen portrayals of Indian women. Mukerji has featured in listings of the most popular and highest-paid Hindi film actresses of the 2000s. Although Mukerji was born into the Mukherjee-Samarth family, in which her parents and relatives were members of the Indian film industry, she did not aspire to pursue a career in film. As a teenager she dabbled with acting by starring in her father's Bengali-language film Biyer Phool and in the social drama Raja Ki Aayegi Baraat (both 1996). Mukerji had her first commercial success with the action film Ghulam (1998) and breakthrough with the romance Kuch Kuch Hota Hai (1998). Following a brief setback, the year 2002 marked a turning point for her when she was cast by Yash Raj Films as the star of the drama Saathiya.
Edward II (25 April 1284 – 21 September 1327), also called Edward of Caernarfon, was King of England from 1307 until he was deposed in January 1327. The fourth son of Edward I, Edward became the heir apparent to the throne following the death of his elder brother Alphonso. Beginning in 1300, Edward accompanied his father on campaigns to pacify Scotland. In 1306, he was knighted in a grand ceremony at Westminster Abbey. Following his father's death, Edward succeeded to the throne in 1307. He married Isabella, the daughter of the powerful King Philip IV of France, in 1308, as part of a long-running effort to resolve tensions between the English and French crowns. Edward had a close and controversial relationship with Piers Gaveston, who had joined his household in 1300. The precise nature of their relationship is uncertain; they may have been friends, lovers or sworn brothers. Edward's relationship with Gaveston inspired Christopher Marlowe's 1592 play Edward II, along with other plays, films, novels and media. Gaveston's power as Edward's favourite provoked discontent both among the barons and the French royal family, and Edward was forced to exile him. On Gaveston's return, the barons pressured the king into agreeing to wide-ranging reforms, called the Ordinances of 1311. The newly empowered barons banished Gaveston, to which Edward responded by revoking the reforms and recalling his favourite. Led by Edward's cousin Thomas, 2nd Earl of Lancaster, a group of the barons seized and executed Gaveston in 1312, beginning several years of armed confrontation. English forces were pushed back in Scotland, where Edward was decisively defeated by Robert the Bruce at the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314. Widespread famine followed, and criticism of the king's reign mounted.
John Barrymore (born John Sidney Blyth; February 14 or 15, 1882 – May 29, 1942) was an American actor on stage, screen and radio. A member of the Drew and Barrymore theatrical families, he initially tried to avoid the stage, and briefly attempted a career as an artist, but appeared on stage together with his father Maurice in 1900, and then his sister Ethel the following year. He began his career in 1903 and first gained attention as a stage actor in light comedy, then high drama, culminating in productions of Justice (1916), Richard III (1920) and Hamlet (1922); his portrayal of Hamlet led to him being called the "greatest living American tragedian". After a success as Hamlet in London in 1925, Barrymore left the stage for 14 years and instead focused entirely on films. In the silent film era, he was well received in such pictures as Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920), Sherlock Holmes (1922) and The Sea Beast (1926). During this period, he gained his nickname, the Great Profile. His stage-trained voice proved an asset when sound films were introduced, and three of his works, Grand Hotel (1932), Twentieth Century (1934) and Midnight (1939) have been inducted into the National Film Registry.
Air Vice Marshal McCauley as AOC Eastern Area, 1953 Air Marshal Sir John Patrick Joseph McCauley, KBE, CB (18 March 1899 – 3 February 1989) was a senior commander in the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF). He served as Chief of the Air Staff from 1954 to 1957. A Duntroon graduate, McCauley spent four years in the Australian Military Forces before transferring to the RAAF in 1924. He was Director of Training from 1936 to 1938, and commanded engineering and flying training schools for the first eighteen months of World War II. Having been promoted to group captain in 1940, he was posted to Singapore in June 1941 to take charge of all RAAF units defending the area. He earned praise for his efforts in attacking invading Japanese forces before the fall of Singapore, and for his dedication in evacuating his men. After serving as Deputy Chief of the Air Staff in 1942–44, he was appointed to a senior operational role with the Royal Air Force's 2nd Tactical Air Force in Europe, where he saw out the rest of the war. Following the end of hostilities, McCauley again became Deputy Chief of the Air Staff. In 1947 he was promoted to air vice marshal and appointed Chief of Staff at British Commonwealth Occupation Force Headquarters in Japan. Returning to Australia in June 1949, he served as the last Air Officer Commanding (AOC) Eastern Area and the inaugural AOC Home Command (now Air Command). Raised to air marshal, he took up the position of Chief of the Air Staff in January 1954, and was knighted a year later. During his tenure in the RAAF's senior role, McCauley focused on potential deployments to Southeast Asia—particularly Vietnam—and threats from the north, commencing redevelopment of RAAF Base Darwin and recommending purchase of a light supersonic bomber to replace the Air Force's English Electric Canberra. After retiring from military life in March 1957, he chaired various community and welfare organisations, serving as Federal President of the Air Force Association for ten years. He died in Sydney in 1989, aged 89.
Silverchair were an Australian rock band, which formed in 1992 as Innocent Criminals in Newcastle, New South Wales with Ben Gillies on drums, Daniel Johns on vocals and guitars, and Chris Joannou on bass guitar. The group got their big break in mid-1994 when they won a national demo competition conducted by SBS TV show Nomad and ABC radio station, Triple J. The band was signed by Murmur, and were successful in Australia and internationally. Silverchair have sold over six million albums worldwide. Silverchair won more ARIA Music Awards than any other artist in history with 21 wins from 49 nominations. They also received six APRA Awards, with Johns winning three songwriting awards in 2008. All five of their studio albums debuted at number one on the ARIA Albums Chart: Frogstomp (1995), Freak Show (1997), Neon Ballroom (1999), Diorama (2002), and Young Modern (2007). Three singles reached number-one on the related ARIA Singles Chart: " Tomorrow" (1994), " Freak" (1997), and " Straight Lines" (2007).
Alboin (530s – 28 June 572) was king of the Lombards from about 560 until 572. During his reign the Lombards ended their migrations by settling in Italy, the northern part of which Alboin conquered between 569 and 572. He had a lasting effect on Italy and the Pannonian Basin; in the former his invasion marked the beginning of centuries of Lombard rule, and in the latter his defeat of the Gepids and his departure from Pannonia ended the dominance there of the Germanic peoples. The period of Alboin's reign as king in Pannonia following the death of his father, Audoin, was one of confrontation and conflict between the Lombards and their main neighbors, the Gepids. The Gepids initially gained the upper hand, but in 567, thanks to his alliance with the Avars, Alboin inflicted a decisive defeat on his enemies, whose lands the Avars subsequently occupied. The increasing power of his new neighbours caused Alboin some unease however, and he therefore decided to leave Pannonia for Italy, hoping to take advantage of the Byzantine Empire's reduced ability to defend its territory in the wake of the Gothic War.
Teresa Cristina at age 66, 1888 Dona Teresa Cristina delle Due Sicilie (14 March 1822 – 28 December 1889), nicknamed "the Mother of the Brazilians", was the Empress consort of Emperor Dom Pedro II of Brazil, who reigned from 1831 to 1889. Born a Princess of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies in present-day southern Italy, she was the daughter of King Don Francesco I (Francis I) of the Italian branch of the House of Bourbon and his wife Maria Isabel (Maria Isabella). It was long believed by historians that the Princess was raised in an ultra-conservative, intolerant atmosphere which resulted in a timid and unassertive character in public and an ability to be contented with very little materially or emotionally. Recent studies revealed a more complex character, who despite having respected the social norms of the era, was able to assert a limited independence due to her strongly opinionated personality as well as her interest in learning, sciences and culture. The Princess was married by proxy to Pedro II in 1843. Her spouse's expectations had been raised when a portrait was presented that depicted Teresa Cristina as an idealized beauty, but he was displeased by his bride's plain looks upon their first meeting later that year. Despite a cold beginning, the couple's relationship improved as time passed, due primarily to Teresa Cristina's patience, kindness, generosity and simplicity. These traits also helped her win the hearts of the Brazilian people, and her distance from political controversies shielded her from criticism. She also sponsored archaeological studies in Italy and Italian immigration to Brazil.
Nancy Davis Reagan (born Anne Frances Robbins; July 6, 1921 – March 6, 2016) was an American film actress and the second wife of Ronald Reagan, the 40th president of the United States. She was the first lady of the United States from 1981 to 1989. She was born in New York City. After her parents separated, she lived in Maryland with an aunt and uncle for six years. When her mother remarried in 1929, she moved to Chicago and later was adopted by her mother's second husband. As Nancy Davis, she was a Hollywood actress in the 1940s and 1950s, starring in films such as The Next Voice You Hear..., Night into Morning, and Donovan's Brain. In 1952, she married Ronald Reagan, who was then president of the Screen Actors Guild. They had two children together. Reagan was the first lady of California when her husband was governor from 1967 to 1975, and she began to work with the Foster Grandparents Program.
William of Wrotham or William de Wrotham (died c. 1217) was a medieval English royal administrator and clergyman. Although a late 13th-century source says that William held a royal office under King Henry II of England (reigned 1154–1189), the first contemporary reference to William is in 1197, when he became responsible for, among other things, the royal tin mines. He also held ecclesiastical office, eventually becoming Archdeacon of Taunton, and served King John of England as an administrator of ecclesiastical lands and a collector of taxes. William's main administrative work was naval. He was in charge of the royal fleet in the south of England in 1205, and was one of those responsible for the development of Portsmouth as a naval dockyard. He continued to be involved in naval matters until 1214 or later, but by 1215 he had joined the First Barons' War against John. After John's death in 1216, William returned to the royalist cause. He probably died in late 1217. Known to a contemporary chronicler as one of John's "evil advisers", William is said by modern historians to have had a "special responsibility for ports, customs, and the navy", and was "keeper of ports", a forerunner of the office of First Lord of the Admiralty.
England in the late ninth century Æthelwold () or Æthelwald (died 902 or 903) was the younger of two known sons of Æthelred I, King of Wessex from 865 to 871. Æthelwold and his brother Æthelhelm were still infants when their father the king died while fighting a Danish Viking invasion. The throne passed to the king's younger brother (Æthelwold's uncle) Alfred the Great, who carried on the war against the Vikings and won a crucial victory at the Battle of Edington in 878. After Alfred's death in 899, Æthelwold disputed the throne with Alfred's son, Edward the Elder. As senior ætheling (prince of the royal dynasty eligible for kingship), Æthelwold had a strong claim to the throne. He attempted to raise an army to support his claim, but was unable to get sufficient support to meet Edward in battle and fled to Viking-controlled Northumbria, where he was accepted as king. In 901 or 902 he sailed with a fleet to Essex, where he was also accepted as king.
Lukather performing with Toto, 2007 Steven Lee Lukather (born October 21, 1957) is an American guitarist, singer, songwriter, arranger and record producer, best known as the sole continuous founding member of the rock band Toto from its founding in 1976 to its latest hiatus in 2019. A prolific session musician, Lukather has recorded guitar tracks for more than 1,500 albums representing a broad array of artists and genres. He has also contributed to albums and hit singles as a songwriter, arranger and producer. Most notably, Lukather played guitar on Boz Scaggs' albums Down Two Then Left (1977) and Middle Man (1980), and was a prominent contributor to several studio albums by Michael Jackson, including Thriller (1982). Lukather has released seven solo albums, the latest of which, Transition, was released in January 2013. In 1976, when Lukather was nineteen years old, he was invited by his high school friends David Paich and the Porcaro brothers Steve and Jeff to join them in forming their band, Toto. He remained a member of the band throughout its entire history, in latter years serving as its manager, musical director, and live emcee. Lukather's reputation as a guitarist and his association with Paich and the Porcaro brothers, who also became established artists in their own rights, allowed him to secure a steady flow of session work in the 1970s and 1980s. Lukather has been nominated for twelve Grammy Awards, and has won five. While his work with Toto was predominantly based on pop rock music and his solo work ventures into progressive rock and hard rock, many of Lukather's side-projects are focused on jazz fusion. He held a long-time collaboration with jazz guitarist Larry Carlton that produced a Grammy-winning live album, and he was a member of the jazz fusion band Los Lobotomys, a collaboration of prominent session musicians. Since 2012, Lukather has toured with former Beatles drummer Ringo Starr's live supergroup, the All-Starr Band.
- ... that the gay manga artist Jiraiya has been called "kind of a Tom of Finland for the Asian market"?
- ... that Lieutenant-General Sir David Lindsay feared being made a scapegoat for the poor state of defences at Plymouth during the Armada of 1779?
- ... that Pope Alexander VI granted a plenary indulgence to those willing to work on the demolition of the Meta Romuli?
- ... that Nihonga artist Yumeji Takehisa was arrested in connection with a plot to assassinate Emperor Meiji of Japan?
- ... that in 1845, Samuel Mulledy was the President of Georgetown College, a Jesuit institution, but five years later was expelled from the Jesuit order?
- ... that before becoming a writer for Saturday Night Live, actress Alison Gates said "my dream job would be writing instead of performing"?
- ... that while chief engineer of the Municipal Corporation of Delhi, Ramesh Sumant Mehta implemented what was at the time the largest municipal drainage system in India?
- ... that President Ronald Reagan once phoned television host Truman Taylor on the air to praise his "creative" Job-A-Thon show?
- ... that instead of attending Columbia University, Taiwanese engineer Ye Qingyao joined the February 28 rebellion, was jailed, and then escaped to China on a sampan?
- ... that after Chinese General Dai Anlan died in the Burma Campaign, the United States awarded him the Legion of Merit, which was destroyed during the Cultural Revolution and reissued by President Reagan?
- ... that musician Finneas made a cameo appearance as an Uber driver in the music video for Tove Lo's song "Bikini Porn"?
- ... that until the Salary Grab Act was passed in 1873, President Ulysses S. Grant earned the same salary as George Washington did 80 years earlier?
[nil edit] General images
The following are images from various biography-related articles on Wikipedia.
Eminent Victorians set the standard for 20th century biographical writing, when it was published in 1918.
Do you have a question about Wikipedia biographical content that you can't find the answer to?
Consider asking it at the Wikipedia reference desk.
For editor resources and to collaborate with other editors on improving Wikipedia's Biography-related articles, see WikiProject Biography.
- 14 October 2020 –
- Ugandan security forces raid the offices of the National Unity Platform in Kampala and arrest several people, including opposition leader and presidential candidate Robert Kyagulanyi Ssentamu, allegedly for illegally housing army uniforms. Signatures to get Ssentamu on the ballot and his 1campaign materials were also seized. (DW)
- 8 October 2020 –
- A scroll containing a handwritten poem by deceased Chinese Communist Party leader Mao Zedong, claimed to be worth around US$300 million, is recovered in Hong Kong after having been stolen on September 10. It was found cut in half, likely because its 2.8 m (9.2 ft)-length made it difficult to display. (BBC)
- 6 October 2020 – Mali War
- Jihadist group Jama'at Nasr al-Islam wal Muslimin releases Malian opposition leader Soumaïla Cissé, who had been held captive since March, and French aid worker Sophie Pétronin, who had been held captive since 2016. (The Guardian)
- 5 October 2020 – United Kingdom–Venezuela relations, Venezuelan presidential crisis
- The Court of Appeals for England and Wales overturns a ruling earlier this year by the High Court of Justice that stated the government of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro did not have the right to access the Central Bank of Venezuela's gold, worth more than US$1.8 billion, currently stored by the Bank of England due to the UK government's recognition of oppositional leader Juan Guaidó as the actual president. (The Guardian)
- 3 October 2020 – 2020 Green Party of Canada leadership election
- The former 2019 federal Green Party candidate for Toronto Centre and older sister of Canadian actress Ngozi Paul, Annamie Paul, is elected as the new leader of the federal Green Party. (CBC)
- 30 September 2020 –
- An Indian court acquits 32 people, including former Deputy Prime Minister L. K. Advani and former leader of the ruling BJP Uma Bharti, of their role in the demolition of the former Babri Masjid. (BBC)
Updated: 11:33, 16 October 2020
"…life will not perish! It will begin anew with love; it will start out naked and tiny; it will take root in the wilderness, and to it all that we did and built will mean nothing—our towns and factories, our art, our ideas will all mean nothing, and yet life will not perish! Only we have perished. Our houses and machines will be in ruins, our systems will collapse, and the names of our great will fall away like dry leaves. Only you, love, will blossom on this rubbish heap and commit the seed of life to the winds."
— Karel Čapek
In R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots), 1921
Select [►] to view subcategories
[nil edit] Recognized content
Featured articles
- DJ AM
- Aaliyah
- Lazarus Aaronson
- Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan
- Abu Nidal
- Chinua Achebe
- Eliza Acton
- John Adair
- Amy Adams
- Doc Adams
- John Adams
- Samuel Adams
- Nick Adenhart
- Áedán mac Gabráin
- Ælfheah of Canterbury
- Ælle of Sussex
- Æthelbald of Mercia
- Æthelbald, King of Wessex
- Æthelberht of Kent
- Æthelberht, King of Wessex
- Æthelflæd
- Æthelred, Lord of the Mercians
- Æthelred of Mercia
- Æthelred I, King of Wessex
- Æthelstan A
- Æthelstan
- Æthelwold ætheling
- Æthelwulf, King of Wessex
- Ben Affleck
- Afonso, Prince Imperial of Brazil
- Sadruddin Aga Khan
- Jonathan Agnew
- Spiro Agnew
- Ahmose I
- Mukhtar al-Thaqafi
- Albert, Prince Consort
- Prince Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence and Avondale
- Alboin
- Alcibiades
- Suicide of Leelah Alcorn
- Aldfrith of Northumbria
- Buzz Aldrin
- Alexander of Greece
- Alexander of Lincoln
- Alexandra of Denmark
- Hadji Ali
- Princess Alice of Battenberg
- Alice in Chains
- Charles-Valentin Alkan
- Gubby Allen
- Ike Altgens
- Luís Alves de Lima e Silva, Duke of Caxias
- Tommy Amaker
- Herman Vandenburg Ames
- Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia
- Anna Anderson
- William T. Anderson
- Mário de Andrade
- Maya Angelou
- Anna of East Anglia
- Anne of Denmark
- Anne, Queen of Great Britain
- Mary Anning
- Anthony Roll
- Antiochus XII Dionysus
- Marshall Applewhite
- Yasser Arafat
- Harriet Arbuthnot
- Archimedes
- Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll
- Lilias Armstrong
- Neil Armstrong
- Chester A. Arthur
- King Arthur
- Albert Stanley, 1st Baron Ashfield
- Shooting of James Ashley
- Elias Ashmole
- Andjar Asmara
- Aspasia
- Asser
- Asylum confinement of Christopher Smart
- Charles Atangana
- Atlanersa
- Attalus I
- James T. Aubrey
- Audioslave
- Augustine of Canterbury
- Augustus
- Alice Ayres
- Ba Cụt
- Kroger Babb
- Walter Bache
- Alexis Bachelot
- Peter Badcoe
- Ivan Bagramyan
- Hobey Baker
- James Robert Baker
- Thomas Baker (aviator)
- Vidya Balan
- Baldwin of Forde
- Albert Ball
- John Balmer
- George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore
- Honoré de Balzac
- Eric Bana
- Bronwyn Bancroft
- Ann Bannon
- Alexandre Banza
- Anna Laetitia Barbauld
- Joseph Barbera
- John Barbirolli
- Alben W. Barkley
- William Barley
- Sid Barnes
- Sid Barnes with the Australian cricket team in England in 1948
- Natalie Clifford Barney
- Nicky Barr
- Richard Barre
- John Barrymore
- Basiliscus
- Cyril Bassett
- Arnold Bax
- Thomas F. Bayard
- Hugh Beadle
- The Beatles
- Felice Beato
- Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom
- Kevin Beattie
- Otto Becher
- J. C. W. Beckham
- Thomas Beecham
- Isabella Beeton
- Bix Beiderbecke
- Mary Bell (aviator)
- Jean Bellette
- Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky and the Belyayev circle
- Judah P. Benjamin
- Shelton Benjamin
- William Sterndale Bennett
- Beorhtwulf of Mercia
- Moe Berg
- Gottlob Berger
- Hector Berlioz
- Frank Berryman
- John W. Beschter
- Ramón Emeterio Betances
- Biddenden Maids
- Big Star
- Steve Biko
- Golding Bird
- Norman Birkett, 1st Baron Birkett
- Georges Bizet
- Black Francis
- Blackbeard
- Arthur Blackburn
- Luke P. Blackburn
- Frank Bladin
- James G. Blaine
- Thomas Blamey
- Sophie Blanchard
- Enid Blyton
- R. V. C. Bodley
- Barthélemy Boganda
- Niels Bohr
- Jean Bolikango
- John F. Bolt
- Margaret Bondfield
- Stede Bonnet
- William Bonville, 1st Baron Bonville
- Daniel Boone
- Brian Booth
- William Borah
- Carsten Borchgrevink
- Frank Borman
- Bernard Bosanquet (cricketer)
- Oliver Bosbyshell
- Harriet Bosse
- William Bostock
- Horatio Bottomley
- Adrian Boult
- Matthew Boulton
- Luc Bourdon
- David Bowie
- James Bowie
- William D. Boyce
- James E. Boyd (scientist)
- Juan Davis Bradburn
- Bessie Braddock
- Guy Bradley
- William O'Connell Bradley
- Don Bradman
- Don Bradman with the Australian cricket team in England in 1948
- Caroline Brady (philologist)
- Lester Brain
- Joel Brand
- William M. Branham
- John C. Breckinridge
- Political career of John C. Breckinridge
- Matthew Brettingham
- Eric Brewer
- William Brill (RAAF officer)
- Benjamin Britten
- Isaac Brock
- Martin Brodeur
- John Brooke-Little
- Neil Brooks
- Bill Brown (cricketer)
- Donald Forrester Brown
- Jesse L. Brown
- John Y. Brown (politician, born 1835)
- William Robinson Brown
- Raymond Brownell
- Stanley Bruce
- Steve Bruce
- William Bruce (architect)
- William Speirs Bruce
- Avery Brundage
- Louise Bryant
- Martin Bucer
- Humphrey Stafford, 1st Duke of Buckingham
- Simon Bolivar Buckner
- David Hillhouse Buel (priest)
- William Burges
- Guy Burgess
- Burke and Hare murders
- Robert Burnell
- Macfarlane Burnet
- Henry Cornelius Burnett
- Henry Burrell (admiral)
- William Henry Bury
- The Bus Uncle
- Alan Bush
- James Wood Bush
- Vannevar Bush
- Josephine Butler
- Pedro Álvares Cabral
- Cædwalla of Wessex
- William de St-Calais
- William Calcraft
- John C. Calhoun
- John Calvin
- Marjorie Cameron
- Elizabeth Canning
- Richard Cantillon
- Georg Cantor
- Mike Capel
- Rudolf Caracciola
- Neville Cardus
- Mariah Carey
- Caroline of Ansbach
- Charles Carroll the Settler
- Rachel Carson
- Rudolph Cartier
- Nancy Cartwright
- Finn M. W. Caspersen
- Carlos Castillo Armas
- Robert Catesby
- Catherine de' Medici
- Ceawlin of Wessex
- James Chadwick
- Roger B. Chaffee
- Neville Chamberlain
- Rise of Neville Chamberlain
- Happy Chandler
- Charlie Chaplin
- Percy Chapman
- Ian Chappell
- Charles I of England
- Charles II of England
- Jessica Chastain
- Harry Chauvel
- Anton Chekhov
- Robert de Chesney
- V. Gordon Childe
- Choe Bu
- Frédéric Chopin
- Priyanka Chopra
- Murray Chotiner
- Chrisye
- Colley Cibber
- Clarence 13X
- Wesley Clark
- Dudley Clarke
- Rebecca Clarke (composer)
- Clement of Dunblane
- Cleopatra
- Death of Cleopatra
- Cleopatra Selene of Syria
- Grover Cleveland
- Henry Clifford, 10th Baron Clifford
- Kim Clijsters
- Cliff Clinkscales
- Hillary Clinton
- Harry Cobby
- Jane Cobden
- Coenred of Mercia
- Coenwulf of Mercia
- Adrian Cole (RAAF officer)
- Paul Collingwood
- A. E. J. Collins
- Martha Layne Collins
- Michael Collins (astronaut)
- Bert Combs
- James B. Conant
- Constantine II of Scotland
- Learie Constantine
- Henry Conwell
- William Cooley
- Calvin Coolidge
- Bradley Cooper
- D. B. Cooper
- Gary Cooper
- John Sherman Cooper
- Edward Drinker Cope
- William de Corbeil
- Richard Cordray
- Walter de Coutances
- Stan Coveleski
- Walter de Coventre
- Noël Coward
- William Cragh
- Ian Craig
- Stephen Crane
- Thomas Cranmer
- Jack Crawford (cricketer)
- O. G. S. Crawford
- Tom Crean (explorer)
- Dick Cresswell
- Thomas Crisp
- John J. Crittenden
- Ben Crosby
- C. R. M. F. Cruttwell
- Andrew Cunningham, 1st Viscount Cunningham of Hyndhope
- Urse d'Abetot
- Roderic Dallas
- Damageplan
- Edward Thomas Daniell
- Richard Dannatt
- Charles Darwin
- Homer Davenport
- Phillip Davey
- David I of Scotland
- Elizabeth David
- Harold Davidson
- Randall Davidson
- Russell T Davies
- S. O. Davies
- George Andrew Davis Jr.
- Jefferson Davis
- Emily Davison
- John Day (printer)
- Claude Debussy
- Frederick Delius
- Demosthenes
- Bill Denny
- Tom Derrick
- Joseph Desha
- Hermann Detzner
- Deusdedit of Canterbury
- Emily Dickinson
- John Diefenbaker
- Diocletian
- Walt Disney
- Benjamin Disraeli
- D. Djajakusuma
- Djedkare Isesi
- Steve Dodd
- Charles Domery
- Domitian
- Donnchadh, Earl of Carrick
- John Doubleday (restorer)
- Alec Douglas-Home
- John Douglas (architect)
- Marjory Stoneman Douglas
- Theodore Komnenos Doukas
- Neal Dow
- Roy Dowling
- Nick Drake
- Tom Driberg
- Montague Druitt
- Peter Drummond (RAF officer)
- Vance Drummond
- W. E. B. Du Bois
- Du Fu
- Thích Quảng Đức
- Charles Duke
- Duke and Duchess of Windsor's 1937 tour of Germany
- Tim Duncan
- Bud Dunn
- Kirsten Dunst
- Don Dunstan
- Pavle Đurišić
- Muhammad al-Durrah incident
- Bob Dylan
- Eadbald of Kent
- Ealdred (archbishop of York)
- Eardwulf of Northumbria
- Bobby Eaton
- Brian Eaton
- Charles Eaton (RAAF officer)
- Isabelle Eberhardt
- Ecgberht, King of Wessex
- Adam Eckfeldt
- Edward II of England
- Edward III of England
- Edward VI of England
- Edward VII
- Edward VIII
- Edward the Elder
- Duncan Edwards
- Henry Edwards (entomologist)
- Monroe Edwards
- Michael Francis Egan
- Jürgen Ehlers
- Elagabalus
- Edward Elgar
- Elizabeth I
- Elizabeth II
- Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother
- Thomas Ellison
- Ernest Emerson
- Ray Emery
- William Hayden English
- Epaminondas
- Antiochus XI Epiphanes
- Ernest Augustus, King of Hanover
- William Etty
- Demetrius III Eucaerus
- Leonhard Euler
- Antiochus X Eusebes
- David Evans (RAAF officer)
- Edmund Evans
- Hiram Wesley Evans
- Peter Evans (swimmer)
- Exhumation and reburial of Richard III of England
- Neil Hamilton Fairley
- Family of Gediminas
- Bernard Fanning
- Richie Farmer
- Ray Farquharson
- Adolfo Farsari
- Gabriel Fauré
- Guy Fawkes
- Bob Feller
- Percy Fender
- Enrico Fermi
- Kathleen Ferrier
- Richard Feynman
- Nikita Filatov
- Millard Fillmore
- John FitzWalter, 2nd Baron FitzWalter
- Zelda Fitzgerald
- Pain fitzJohn
- Five Go Down to the Sea?
- Ian Fleming
- Ernie Fletcher
- Murder of Yvonne Fletcher
- Theoren Fleury
- Gilbert Foliot
- Joseph B. Foraker
- Wendell Ford
- George Formby
- George Formby Sr
- Georg Forster
- George Fox
- Terry Fox
- Rakoto Frah
- Anne Frank
- Ursula Franklin
- Frederick III, German Emperor
- Robin Friday
- Caspar David Friedrich
- John Frusciante
- Florence Fuller
- Margaret Fuller
- Karl Aloys zu Fürstenberg
- Dave Gallaher
- Ronnie Lee Gardner
- James A. Garfield
- Tyrone Garland
- Robert Garran
- James Garrard
- Ragnar Garrett
- William Garrow
- Ben Gascoigne
- Jacob Gens
- Geoffrey (archbishop of York)
- George I of Great Britain
- George I of Greece
- George II of Great Britain
- George III
- George IV
- George V
- George VI
- Prince George of Denmark
- Eddie Gerard
- Gerard (archbishop of York)
- Lisa del Giocondo
- Bobby Gibbes
- Stella Gibbons
- Josiah Willard Gibbs
- William Gibson
- John Gielgud
- W. S. Gilbert
- Adam Gilchrist
- Arthur Gilligan
- Nicolo Giraud
- Hannah Glasse
- John Glenn
- Harry Glicken
- Prince William, Duke of Gloucester
- Stanley Goble
- Godsmack
- William Goebel
- Robert Goff, Baron Goff of Chieveley
- Vincent van Gogh
- Emma Goldman
- Michael Gomez
- E. Urner Goodman
- George Gosse
- George H. D. Gossip
- Arthur Gould (rugby union)
- Chris Gragg
- Otto Graham
- Percy Grainger
- Rachel Chiesley, Lady Grange
- Margaret Macpherson Grant
- Ulysses S. Grant
- John de Gray
- El Greco
- Horace Greeley
- Debora Green
- Stanley Green
- The Greencards
- Herbert Greenfield
- Augusta, Lady Gregory
- Wayne Gretzky
- Jane Grigson
- Joseph Grimaldi
- Rufus Wilmot Griswold
- Orval Grove
- Leslie Groves
- Rhys ap Gruffydd
- Bryan Gunn
- Jake Gyllenhaal
- Maggie Gyllenhaal
- H.D.
- Al-Hafiz
- James P. Hagerstrom
- Richard Hakluyt
- Ayumi Hamasaki
- Ron Hamence with the Australian cricket team in England in 1948
- Wally Hammond
- Amir Hamzah
- Valston Hancock
- Winfield Scott Hancock
- Learned Hand
- Mark Hanna
- William Hanna
- Colin Hannah
- Warren G. Harding
- Donald Hardman
- William Harper (Rhodesian politician)
- Benjamin Harrison
- Fairfax Harrison
- George Harrison
- William Henry Harrison
- Phil Hartman
- Francis Harvey
- Neil Harvey with the Australian cricket team in England in 1948
- Dominik Hašek
- Hasekura Tsunenaga
- Lindsay Hassett with the Australian cricket team in England in 1948
- Anne Hathaway
- Simon Hatley
- Eric A. Havelock
- Richard Hawes
- Ethan Hawke
- John Hay
- Rutherford B. Hayes
- Elwood Haynes
- Frank Headlam
- George Headley
- Reginald Heber
- Princess Helena of the United Kingdom
- John L. Helm
- William Hely
- Ernest Hemingway
- Paul Henderson
- Canadian drug charges and trial of Jimi Hendrix
- Death of Jimi Hendrix
- Jimi Hendrix
- Henry I of England
- Henry III of England
- Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor
- Henry (bishop of Finland)
- Patrick Henry
- Thierry Henry
- George Went Hensley
- Katharine Hepburn
- George Herriman
- Edmund Herring
- Herbie Hewett
- Joe Hewitt (RAAF officer)
- Georgette Heyer
- Peter Heywood
- Hilary of Chichester
- Clem Hill
- Damon Hill
- Lynn Hill
- William Hillcourt
- Bernard Hinault
- Thomas C. Hindman
- Hippocrates
- George Hirst
- Garret Hobart
- Jack Hobbs
- Philip Seymour Hoffman
- Ima Hogg
- James Hogun
- Charles Holden
- Les Holden
- Disappearance of Natalee Holloway
- Stanley Holloway
- Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr.
- Gustav Holst
- Imogen Holst
- Michael Hordern
- Kenneth Horne
- Rogers Hornsby
- E. W. Hornung
- Brian Horrocks
- Nicholas Hoult
- House of Plantagenet
- Margaret Lea Houston
- Art Houtteman
- Juwan Howard
- C. D. Howe
- Robert Howe (Continental Army officer)
- Cedric Howell
- Hu Zhengyan
- Thomas J. Hudner Jr.
- Robert Hues
- Paterson Clarence Hughes
- Caesar Hull
- James Humphreys (pornographer)
- Karmichael Hunt
- Josh Hutcherson
- Anne Hutchinson
- Len Hutton
- Hygeberht
- Jarome Iginla
- Fanny Imlay
- Joaquim José Inácio, Viscount of Inhaúma
- Ine of Wessex
- Charles Inglis (engineer)
- Harold Innis
- Roy Inwood
- Irataba
- Isabeau of Bavaria
- Ismail I of Granada
- Hastings Ismay, 1st Baron Ismay
- Israel the Grammarian
- Ivan Alexander of Bulgaria
- Satoru Iwata
- Andrew Jackson
- Archie Jackson
- Janet Jackson
- John Francis Jackson
- Michael Jackson
- Mike Jackson (British Army officer)
- Hattie Jacques
- James II of England
- James VI and I
- Eusèbe Jaojoby
- Douglas Jardine
- Peter Jeffrey (RAAF officer)
- Frank Jenner
- Peter Jennings
- Jørgen Jensen (soldier)
- Jesus
- Derek Jeter
- Dobroslav Jevđević
- Muhammad Ali Jinnah
- Joan of Arc
- Jocelin of Glasgow
- Joehana
- Scarlett Johansson
- John Edward Brownlee as Attorney-General of Alberta
- John, King of England
- Andrew Johnson
- Ian Johnson (cricketer)
- Joseph Johnson (publisher)
- Keen Johnson
- Keith Johnson (cricket administrator)
- Magic Johnson
- Early life of Samuel Johnson
- Samuel Johnson
- Andrew Johnston (singer)
- David A. Johnston
- John W. Johnston
- Angelina Jolie
- Murder of Dwayne Jones
- George Jones (RAAF officer)
- Peter Jones (missionary)
- Michael Jordan
- Bradley Joseph
- Jane Joseph
- Josquin des Prez
- Jovan Vladimir
- Joy Division
- Ernest Joyce
- James Joyce
- Master Juba
- Justus
- Franz Kafka
- Paul Kagame
- Kareena Kapoor
- Sonam K Ahuja
- Abdul Karim (the Munshi)
- Masako Katsura
- J. R. Kealoha
- Maynard James Keenan
- Fred Keenor
- George F. Kennan
- Assassination of Robert F. Kennedy
- Susi Kentikian
- Jomo Kenyatta
- Johannes Kepler
- Mark Kerry
- André Kertész
- Albert Ketèlbey
- Akhtar Hameed Khan
- Shah Rukh Khan
- Hasan al-Kharrat
- Nikita Khrushchev
- Bill Kibby
- Craig Kieswetter
- Harmon Killebrew
- Roy Kilner
- Bart King
- Elwyn Roy King
- Bruce Kingsbury
- Thomas C. Kinkaid
- The Kinks
- Johann von Klenau
- Frank Klepacki
- Nigel Kneale
- John Knox
- Kalki Koechlin
- Manuel I Komnenos
- Tadeusz Kościuszko
- Sandy Koufax
- George Koval
- Christopher C. Kraft Jr.
- Walter Krueger
- Paul Kruger
- Nikolai Kulikovsky
- Nodar Kumaritashvili
- Cynna Kydd
- Lady Gaga
- Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette
- Ruby Laffoon
- Nestor Lakoba
- Mathew Charles Lamb
- Daniel Lambert
- Osbert Lancaster
- Kenesaw Mountain Landis
- Franklin Knight Lane
- Cosmo Gordon Lang
- George Lansbury
- LaRouche criminal trials
- Brie Larson
- Harold Larwood
- Lat (cartoonist)
- Laurence of Canterbury
- Jennifer Lawrence
- Ursula K. Le Guin
- John Le Mesurier
- Lê Quang Tung
- John Leak
- Raymond Leane
- Louis Leblanc
- Faith Leech
- Vivien Leigh
- Émile Lemoine
- Vladimir Lenin
- John Lennon
- Dan Leno
- Helmut Lent
- John Lerew
- Harriet Leveson-Gower, Countess Granville
- David Lewis (politician)
- Lewis (baseball)
- Maurice Leyland
- Lie Kim Hok
- Marcel Lihau
- Eli Lilly
- Ernst Lindemann
- Trevor Linden
- Lindow Man
- Ray Lindwall with the Australian cricket team in England in 1948
- El Lissitzky
- Little Tich
- Marie Lloyd
- Stefan Lochner
- Kellie Loder
- Carl Hans Lody
- James B. Longacre
- William de Longchamp
- Joseph A. Lopez
- Lorde
- Prince Louis of Battenberg
- Courtney Love
- David Lovering
- Edward Low
- James Russell Lowell
- Sam Loxton
- Sam Loxton with the Australian cricket team in England in 1948
- John Bingham, 7th Earl of Lucan
- Steve Lukather
- Glynn Lunney
- Luo Yixiu
- Roberto Luongo
- Witold Lutosławski
- Marcus Ward Lyon Jr.
- Douglas MacArthur's escape from the Philippines
- Douglas MacArthur
- Charlie Macartney
- George Macaulay
- Angus Lewis Macdonald
- John A. Macdonald
- Gregor MacGregor
- Iven Mackay
- Aeneas Mackintosh
- Archie MacLaren
- Bruno Maddox
- Charles Edward Magoon
- Bernard A. Maguire
- Gustav Mahler
- Miriam Makeba
- Malcolm X
- Garnet Malley
- Manchester Mummy
- Nelson Mandela
- Bob Mann (American football)
- Olivia Manning
- Marcian
- Margaret (singer)
- Princess Maria Amélia of Brazil
- Clements Markham
- John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough
- Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough
- Francis Marrash
- Jack Marsh
- Bob Marshall (wilderness activist)
- Thomas R. Marshall
- Billy Martin
- Marwan I
- Mary II of England
- Mary, Queen of Scots
- Mary of Teck
- Herbert Maryon
- Evelyn Mase
- George Mason
- Jules Massenet
- Frank Matcham
- Empress Matilda
- Lionel Matthews
- William Matthews (priest)
- Maximian
- Maximus the Confessor
- Murray Maxwell
- Jimmy McAleer
- Early life and military career of John McCain
- John McCain
- Bill McCann
- John McCauley
- James Whiteside McCay
- Barbara McClintock
- James B. McCreary
- Lanny McDonald
- Bob McEwen
- William McGregor (football)
- William McKinley
- Lesley J. McNair
- Frank McNamara (RAAF officer)
- H. C. McNeile
- Harry McNish
- William McSherry
- Paul McCartney
- Ian Dougald McLachlan
- Alan McNicoll
- Ian Meckiff
- Ezra Meeker
- Jacobus Anthonie Meessen
- Megadeth
- Mellitus
- Danie Mellor
- Felix Mendelssohn
- Menkauhor Kaiu
- Mercury Seven
- Meshuggah
- André Messager
- Olivier Messiaen
- Metallica
- Bob Meusel
- August Meyszner
- Michael Brown Okinawa assault incident
- Khalid al-Mihdhar
- Military service of Ian Smith
- Harvey Milk
- Early life of Keith Miller
- Keith Miller in the 1946–47 Australian cricket season
- Keith Miller with the Australian cricket team in England in 1948
- Kylie Minogue
- Sherman Minton
- Nancy Mitford
- Muhammad I of Granada
- Arthur Mold
- Emery Molyneux
- Marilyn Monroe
- Madeline Montalban
- Pierre Monteux
- Claudio Monteverdi
- George Moore (novelist)
- Henry Moore
- James Moore (Continental Army officer)
- Julianne Moore
- Fred Moosally
- Emanuel Moravec
- Howie Morenz
- Sandra Morgan
- Benjamin Morrell
- Arthur Morris
- Edwin P. Morrow
- Meinhard Michael Moser
- Benjamin Mountfort
- Mozart in Italy
- Al-Mu'tadid
- Al-Mu'tasim
- Muhammad II of Granada
- Muhammad III of Granada
- Muhammad ibn Tughj al-Ikhshid
- Rani Mukerji
- Samuel Mulledy
- Thomas F. Mulledy
- Baron Munchausen
- Douglas Albert Munro
- Madman Muntz
- Murasaki Shikibu
- Alister Murdoch
- Audie Murphy
- Cillian Murphy
- Harry Murray
- Margaret Murray
- Stan Musial
- Florence Nagle
- Fridtjof Nansen
- Daisy Jugadai Napaltjarri
- Wintjiya Napaltjarri
- Makinti Napanangka
- Ram Narayan
- Francis Nash
- Nasr of Granada
- Elizabeth Needham
- Neferefre
- Neferirkare Kakai
- James Nesbitt
- Hugh de Neville
- Ralph Neville
- James Newland
- Sydney Newman
- Bill Newton
- Ngô Đình Cẩn
- Nguyễn Chánh Thi
- Carl Nielsen
- Nigel (bishop of Ely)
- Nine Inch Nails
- Nirvana (band)
- Pat Nixon
- Richard Nixon
- Emmy Noether
- John Mowbray, 3rd Duke of Norfolk
- Ruth Norman
- Roger Norreis
- Emperor Norton
- Nostradamus
- The Notorious B.I.G.
- Louie Nunn
- Nyuserre Ini
- Mary Margaret O'Reilly
- Barack Obama
- Ian O'Brien
- Odaenathus
- Óengus I
- Oerip Soemohardjo
- Offa of Mercia
- Kevin O'Halloran
- Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia
- Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna of Russia
- Olga Constantinovna of Russia
- Mark Oliphant
- Bronwyn Oliver
- Laurence Olivier
- Gerard K. O'Neill
- Opeth
- J. Robert Oppenheimer
- The Orb
- Sergo Ordzhonikidze
- Bill O'Reilly (cricketer)
- Leo Ornstein
- Deepika Padukone
- Andreas Palaiologos
- Lionel Palairet
- Emmeline Pankhurst
- Honório Hermeto Carneiro Leão, Marquis of Paraná
- José Paranhos, Viscount of Rio Branco
- Jack Parsons (rocket engineer)
- William Sterling Parsons
- Ben Paschal
- George S. Patton
- George S. Patton slapping incidents
- Paul E. Patton
- Ellis Paul
- Paulinus of York
- Death of Blair Peach
- Robert Peake the Elder
- Franklin Peale
- Pearl Jam
- Kosta Pećanac
- Pedro I of Brazil
- Pedro II of Brazil
- Pedro Afonso, Prince Imperial of Brazil
- Bobby Peel
- Walter Peeler
- I. M. Pei
- Penda of Mercia
- Jerry Pentland
- Thomas Percy (Gunpowder Plot)
- Pericles
- Katy Perry
- Henry Petre
- Milorad Petrović
- Phạm Ngọc Thảo
- Phan Đình Phùng
- Phan Xích Long
- Philip I Philadelphus
- Philitas of Cos
- Roy Phillipps
- Erin Phillips
- Tommy Phillips
- Artur Phleps
- Frank Pick
- Franklin Pierce
- Albert Pierrepoint
- Józef Piłsudski
- Pink Floyd
- Harold Pinter
- Freida Pinto
- Benedetto Pistrucci
- Henry Hoʻolulu Pitman
- Brad Pitt
- Pixies (band)
- John Plagis
- Jacques Plante
- Thomas Playford IV
- Gabriel Pleydell
- Edgar Allan Poe
- Virginia Eliza Clemm Poe
- Jean Baptiste Point du Sable
- James K. Polk
- Reg Pollard (general)
- Edwin Taylor Pollock
- Bill Ponsford
- Lazare Ponticelli
- Manuel Marques de Sousa, Count of Porto Alegre
- Francis Poulenc
- Ezra Pound
- Powderfinger
- Elizabeth Willing Powel
- Premiership of John Edward Brownlee
- Elvis Presley
- Joseph Priestley
- Adelaide Anne Procter
- Alain Prost
- Tom Pryce
- CM Punk
- Hilary Putnam
- Minnie Pwerle
- Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky and The Five
- Vidkun Quisling
- R.E.M.
- Jean-Joseph Rabearivelo
- Isidor Isaac Rabi
- Arthur W. Radford
- Radiohead
- Ion Heliade Rădulescu
- Elizabeth Raffald
- Rainilaiarivony
- Ramesses VI
- Alf Ramsey
- Norodom Ranariddh
- Kangana Ranaut
- Ranavalona I
- Ranavalona III
- Samuel J. Randall
- Milos Raonic
- Maurice Ravel
- Satyajit Ray
- William F. Raynolds
- Nancy Reagan
- Ronald Reagan
- Red Barn Murder
- Talbot Baines Reed
- Richard Gavin Reid
- Marian Rejewski
- Stamata Revithi
- Wilfred Rhodes
- Richard II of England
- J. R. Richard
- Maurice Richard
- Ralph Richardson
- Louis Riel
- Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
- Jochen Rindt
- Doug Ring with the Australian cricket team in England in 1948
- Mariano Rivera
- Hilda Rix Nicholas
- Robert of Jumièges
- Iwan Roberts
- George Robey
- Jackie Robinson
- Bobby Robson
- Roekiah
- Woodes Rogers
- Ambrose Rookwood
- Prince Romerson
- George W. Romney
- Mitt Romney
- William de Ros, 6th Baron Ros
- Juan Manuel de Rosas
- Hannah Primrose, Countess of Rosebery
- Elias Abraham Rosenberg
- Hrithik Roshan
- Art Ross
- Lawrence Sullivan Ross
- Pierre Rossier
- Gioachino Rossini
- James Rowland (RAAF officer)
- J. K. Rowling
- Jacob van Ruisdael
- Maria Rundell
- Bill Russell
- Babe Ruth
- Alexander Cameron Rutherford
- Rex Ryan
- James A. Ryder
- John/Eleanor Rykener
- William S. Sadler
- Sahure
- Lady Saigō
- Camille Saint-Saëns
- Joe Sakic
- Salih ibn Mirdas
- Teresa Sampsonia
- Omayra Sánchez
- William Edward Sanders
- Joey Santiago
- Sasha (DJ)
- Mark Satin
- Reg Saunders
- Stanley Savige
- Henry W. Sawyer
- Antonin Scalia
- Frederick Scherger
- Sigi Schmid
- Charles Scott (governor)
- David Scott
- Robert Falcon Scott
- John Martin Scripps
- Uriel Sebree
- Laura Secord
- Daniel Sedin
- Henrik Sedin
- Seleucus VI Epiphanes
- Norman Selfe
- Peter Sellers
- Domenico Selvo
- Joel Selwood
- Waisale Serevi
- William H. Seward
- Sex Pistols
- Friedrich Wilhelm von Seydlitz
- Ernest Shackleton
- Kenneth R. Shadrick
- Olivia Shakespear
- William Shakespeare
- Solomon P. Sharp
- Edmund Sharpe
- George Bernard Shaw
- Sebastian Shaw (actor)
- Joseph Francis Shea
- Wail al-Shehri
- Isaac Shelby
- Mary Shelley
- Shen Kuo
- Alan Shepard
- Elliott Fitch Shepard
- Jack Sheppard
- Kate Sheppard
- Shepseskare
- John Sherman
- William Tecumseh Sherman
- Grace Sherwood
- Mary Martha Sherwood
- Sheshi
- Dmitri Shostakovich
- Alfred Shout
- Shunzhi Emperor
- Sabrina Sidney
- Siegfried Lederer's escape from Auschwitz
- Arthur Sifton
- Silverchair
- Simeon I of Bulgaria
- Tom Simpson
- Wallis Simpson
- Siward, Earl of Northumbria
- Red Skelton
- Slayer
- Andrew Sledd
- Louis Slotin
- The Smashing Pumpkins
- Bedřich Smetana
- Faryl Smith
- Issy Smith
- Lee Smith (baseball)
- Ozzie Smith
- Samantha Smith
- Albertus Soegijapranata
- Georg Solti
- Aaron Sorkin
- Albert Speer
- Lou Spence
- Edgar Speyer
- Adele Spitzeder
- Jo Stafford
- Myles Standish
- Charles Villiers Stanford
- Augustus Owsley Stanley
- Ringo Starr
- Paul Stastny
- William T. Stearn
- G. Ledyard Stebbins
- Gwen Stefani
- Rod Steiger
- Ed Stelmach
- Casey Stengel
- Stephen I of Hungary
- Stephen, King of England
- Stereolab
- Thaddeus Stevens
- Clare Stevenson
- Melford Stevenson
- Charles Stewart (premier)
- Stigand
- Constance Stokes
- Emma Stone
- Charles H. Stonestreet
- Strapping Young Lad
- Eduard Streltsov
- Charlotte Stuart, Duchess of Albany
- Hod Stuart
- Ronald Stuart
- Vernon Sturdee
- Sudirman
- Arthur Sullivan
- Jethro Sumner
- The Supremes
- Jean-François-Marie de Surville
- Sviatoslav I
- Taylor Swift
- John Millington Synge
- Joseph Szigeti
- William Howard Taft
- Paul Palaiologos Tagaris
- Toru Takemitsu
- Don Tallon
- Bazy Tankersley
- Tarrare
- Paul Nobuo Tatsuguchi
- Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
- Edward Teller
- Terry-Thomas
- Theobald of Bec
- Theramenes
- Teresa Cristina of the Two Sicilies
- Nguyễn Ngọc Thơ
- Thomas of Bayeux
- Murder of Julia Martha Thomas
- Thomas the Slav
- William Beach Thomas
- Jim Thome
- James Thompson (surveyor)
- Tiny Thompson
- Tom Thomson
- Ian Thorpe
- Jeremy Thorpe
- Jim Thorpe
- Thrasybulus
- Thurisind
- Paul Tibbets
- Tichborne case
- Benjamin Franklin Tilley
- Benjamin Tillman
- Michael Tippett
- Tiridates I of Armenia
- Joseph W. Tkach
- James Tod
- Mary Toft
- J. R. R. Tolkien
- Billy Joe Tolliver
- Death of Ian Tomlinson
- Tôn Thất Đính
- Mark Tonelli
- Tool (band)
- Ernie Toshack
- Ernie Toshack with the Australian cricket team in England in 1948
- Edgar Towner
- Meghan Trainor
- Bert Trautmann
- John Treloar (museum administrator)
- Marcus Trescothick
- Francis Tresham
- Stephen Trigg
- Sarah Trimmer
- Harry Trott
- Harry R. Truman
- Harry S. Truman
- Hugh Trumble
- Irakli Tsereteli
- Harriet Tubman
- George Tucker (politician)
- Thurman Tucker
- Dick Turpin
- John Tyler
- John Tyndall (politician)
- U2
- Morihei Ueshiba
- Unas
- Uncle Tupelo
- Userkaf
- Fakih Usman
- Ralph Vaughan Williams
- Hedley Verity
- Peter Martyr Vermigli
- Georges Vézina
- Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine
- Queen Victoria
- Giovanni Villani
- Barry Voight
- Kurt Vonnegut
- Jerry Voorhis
- Rudolf Vrba
- Vesna Vulović
- Ellis Wackett
- Abe Waddington
- John Lloyd Waddy
- Cosima Wagner
- Richard Wagner
- Princess Charlotte of Wales
- Kenneth Walker
- Alfred Russel Wallace
- Hector Waller
- Hugh Walpole
- Francis Walsingham
- Hubert Walter
- Allan Walters
- William Walton
- Joe Warbrick
- Fabian Ware
- William Warelwast
- Blair Wark
- John Wark
- Peter Warlock
- Jack L. Warner
- George Washington and slavery
- George Washington (inventor)
- Roger Waters
- Emma Watson
- Oswald Watt
- Evelyn Waugh
- Lawrence Weathers
- James B. Weaver
- Stanley Price Weir
- Henry Wells (general)
- Lawrence Wetherby
- Tyrone Wheatley
- Mortimer Wheeler
- Ryan White
- Thomas White (Australian politician)
- Gough Whitlam
- John Whittle
- The Wiggles
- Wiglaf of Mercia
- Wihtred of Kent
- William Wilberforce
- Wilco
- Maurice Wilder-Neligan
- Wilfrid
- Ellen Wilkinson
- William III of England
- William IV
- William of Wrotham
- William of Tyre
- William the Conqueror
- Bernard Williams
- Michelle Williams (actress)
- Nigel Williams (conservator)
- Richard Williams (RAAF officer)
- Nathaniel Parker Willis
- Wendell Willkie
- Francis Willughby
- John Wilton (general)
- Bob Windle
- Kate Winslet
- Reese Witherspoon
- Władysław II Jagiełło
- P. G. Wodehouse
- Mary Wollstonecraft
- Rudolf Wolters
- Anna May Wong
- Henry Wood
- Samuel Merrill Woodbridge
- Michael Woodruff
- James Park Woods
- Alfred Worden
- Fanny Bullock Workman
- Edward Wright (mathematician)
- John Michael Wright
- Henry Wrigley
- Wulfhere of Mercia
- William Wurtenburg
- Yagan
- Yao Ming
- Robert Sterling Yard
- Murder of Joanna Yeates
- W. B. Yeats
- Yusuf I of Granada
- Alexander II Zabinas
- Frank Zappa
- Zenobia
- Catherine Zeta-Jones
- Zhang Heng
- Zhou Tong (archer)
- Preity Zinta
- Otto Julius Zobel
- Scott Zolak
- Nikita Zotov
- Huldrych Zwingli
- Peter van Geersdaele
- Mary van Kleeck
[nil edit] Associated Wikimedia
Purge server cache
|