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© D/\\/IIID ℠ ®

© D/\\/IIID ℠ ®

daviiidq [at] googlemail [dot] com | The Scientist
Amazon.com: Molecular Quantum Mechanics: Peter Atkins, Ronald Friedman - http://www.amazon.com/Molecul...
Amazon.com: Molecular Quantum Mechanics: Peter Atkins, Ronald Friedman
rapidshare.com/files/128530924/Molecular_Quantum_Mechanics_4th_Ed_.Atkins.P.W.2004.djvu.rar - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ®
abbyy finereader 10 - من به طور اضطراری دنبال سريال اين نرم افزار او سی آر هستم
ياری رسانی هست؟ :دی - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ®
ميلاد قربونت بيا اين رو لايک بزن بياد در معرض عموم :دی - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ®
:)) - Shandiz
نخند شانديز اگه کارت گير بود گريه ميکردی - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ®
امّا ای ول در معرض عمومم قرار دادی :دی - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ®
:D:D:D - Shandiz
آقا مشکل حل شد، يک نفر خارجی در فرفرستان لينک داده بود قبلاً ... هفده ساعت پيش ... خدا اين فرفرستان را از ما نگيره - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ®
rapidshare.com/files/308206854/FineReader_10.rar - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ®
خدا اين فرفرستان را از ما نگيره
YouTube - 2 year-old Tilly Horn performing Celine Dion - Titanic - http://www.youtube.com/watch...
YouTube
				- 2 year-old Tilly Horn performing Celine Dion - Titanic
Play
:))))) - RokhSaare
. - RokhSaare
2 MB/s - 174.6 MB von 296.8 MB, 59 Sekunden üb
2 MB/s - 270.0 MB von 296.8 MB, 12 Sekunden üb - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ®
لری بگید آقا لطفا ! :D - RokhSaare
سرعتا داريند؟ :دی - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ®
اسمايلی يک نديد بديد =)))))))))))) - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ®
:)))) - RokhSaare
YouTube - 11 year-old Tilly Horn performing C.Aguilera - Beautiful - http://www.youtube.com/watch...
YouTube
				- 11 year-old Tilly Horn performing C.Aguilera - Beautiful
Play
YouTube - 11 year-old Tilly Horn performing The greatest love of all - http://www.youtube.com/watch...
YouTube
				- 11 year-old Tilly Horn performing The greatest love of all
Play
YouTube - Celine Dion - What a Wonderful World [Father's Hommage] - http://www.youtube.com/watch...
YouTube
				- Celine Dion - What a Wonderful World [Father's Hommage]
Play
YouTube - Celine Dion Talks... - http://www.youtube.com/watch...
YouTube
				- Celine Dion Talks...
Play
ما دانشطلب را دوست داريم :اسمايلی دشمن دانا که غم جان بود
ما نیز :دی - Raheleh
من دشمنم؟؟؟؟؟؟؟؟؟ - دانشطلب
کی خسته است؟ - کیمیاء
خوش به حال جفتتون ! :))))))))) - Afra
نه بابا دانش جان مثال بود ... در مثل هم مناقشه نيست - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ®
US&A? :Borat's smiley
Borat_Two_thumbs_up_yours.jpg
borat-neon-green-swimsuit08.jpg
-O - Raheleh
Pseudomonas - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
Pseudomonas - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Pseudomonas is a genus of gamma proteobacteria, belonging to the larger family of pseudomonads. Recently, 16S rRNA sequence analysis has redefined the taxonomy of many bacterial species.[1] As a result the genus Pseudomonas includes strains formerly classified in the genera Chryseomonas and Flavimonas.[2] Other strains previously classified in the genus Pseudomonas are now classified in the genera Burkholderia and Ralstonia." - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ® from Bookmarklet
Electorate of Saxony - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
Electorate of Saxony - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Electorate of Saxony - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Electorate of Saxony - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The Electorate of Saxony (German: Kurfürstentum Sachsen) or Duchy of Upper Saxony was an independent hereditary electorate of the Holy Roman Empire from 1356 to 1806. It was[clarification needed] the successor state[clarification needed] of the Duchy of Saxe-Wittenberg, and was itself replaced in Napoleonic times by the Kingdom of Saxony (1806)." - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ® from Bookmarklet
Altreich - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
"Altreich ("Old Empire") is a German term used from 1938 to 1945 for territories that were part of Third Reich, as opposed to Austria (called Ostmark by the Nazis), the Sudetenland and other territories annexed by Germany in subsequent years. by modern German historical writing as a synonym for the Holy Roman Empire. by Austrian historians to refer to the Austrian Empire as well as Austria-Hungary." - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ® from Bookmarklet
Hermann Göring - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
Hermann Göring - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hermann Göring - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hermann Göring - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Hermann Wilhelm Göring (also spelled Goering)[1] ( listen) (12 January 1893 – 15 October 1946) was a German politician, military leader and a leading member of the Nazi Party. Among many offices, he was Hitler's designated successor and commander of the Luftwaffe (German Air Force). With twenty-two confirmed kills as a fighter pilot, he was a veteran of the First World War and recipient of the coveted Pour le Mérite ("The Blue Max"). He was the last commander of "The Red Baron", Manfred von Richthofen's Jagdgeschwader 1 air squadron. Following the end of the Second World War, Göring was convicted of war crimes and crimes against humanity at the Nuremberg Trials. He was sentenced to death by hanging, but committed suicide by cyanide ingestion the night before he was due to be hanged." - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ® from Bookmarklet
Catholic League (German) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
Catholic League (German) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Catholic League (German) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The German Catholic League (German: Katholische Liga) was initially a loose confederation of Roman Catholic German states formed on July 10, 1609 to counteract the Protestant Union (formed 1608), whereby the participating states concluded an alliance "for the defence of the Catholic religion and peace within the Empire." Modeled loosely on the more intransigent ultra-Catholic French Catholic League (1576), the German Catholic league initially acted politically to negotiate issues with the slightly older Protestant Union. Nevertheless, the league's founding, as had the founding of the Protestant Union, further exacerbated long standing tensions between the Protestants reformers and the Roman Catholics which thereafter began ratcheting upwards with ever more frequent episodes of civil disobedience, repression, and retaliations that would eventually ignite into the first phase of the Thirty Years' War roughly a decade later with the act of rebellion and calculated insult known as the... more... - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ® from Bookmarklet
Johann Tserclaes, Count of Tilly - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
Johann Tserclaes, Count of Tilly - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Johann Tserclaes, Count of Tilly - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Johann Tserclaes, Count of Tilly (Dutch: Johan 't Serclaes) (February 1559 - 30 April 1632), known as the Monk in Armor, was a Field Marshal who commanded the Imperial and Holy Roman Empire's forces in the Thirty Years' War. He had a string of important victories against the Bohemians, Germans and later the Danish, but was then defeated by forces led by the King Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden. Along with Duke Albrecht von Wallenstein of Friedland and Mecklenburg, he was one of two chief commanders of the Holy Roman Empire’s forces." - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ® from Bookmarklet
Upper Saxon Circle - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
Upper Saxon Circle - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The Upper Saxon Circle (German: Obersächsischer Reichskreis) was an Imperial Circle of the Holy Roman Empire, created in 1512. The circle was dominated by the two electorates of Brandenburg and Saxony." - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ® from Bookmarklet
Hispania - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
Hispania - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hispania - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Show all
"Hispania was the Roman name for the Iberian Peninsula. Under the Republic, Hispania was divided into two provinces: Hispania Citerior and Hispania Ulterior. During the Principate, Hispania Ulterior was divided into two new provinces, Baetica and Lusitania, while Hispania Citerior was renamed Tarraconensis. Subsequently, the western part of Tarraconensis was split off, first as Hispania Nova, later renamed Callaecia (or Gallaecia, whence modern Galicia). From Diocletian's Tetrarchy (AD 284) onwards, the south of remaining Tarraconensis was again split off as Carthaginensis, and probably then too the Balearic Islands and all the resulting provinces formed one civil diocese under the vicarius for the Hispaniae (that is, the Celtic provinces)." - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ® from Bookmarklet
Iberian Peninsula - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
Iberian Peninsula - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Iberian Peninsula - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The Iberian Peninsula, or Iberia, is located in the extreme southwest of Europe and includes modern-day Portugal, Spain, Andorra and Gibraltar and a very small area of France. It is the westernmost of the three major southern European peninsulas—the Iberian, Italian, and Balkan peninsulas. It is bordered on the southeast and east by the Mediterranean Sea, and on the north, west and southwest by the Atlantic Ocean. The Pyrenees form the northeast edge of the peninsula, separating it from the rest of Europe. In the south, it approaches the northern coast of Africa. It is the second-largest peninsula in Europe, with an area of 582,860 square kilometres (225,040 sq mi)." - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ® from Bookmarklet
Roman conquest of Hispania - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
Roman conquest of Hispania - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Roman conquest of Hispania - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The Roman conquest of Hispania was a historical period that began with the Roman landing at Empúries in 218 BC and ended with the Roman conquest of the Iberian Peninsula, then Hispania, by Caesar Augustus in 17 BC. Long before the First Punic War, between the 8th and 7th centuries BC the Phoenicians (and later the Carthaginians) had already appeared in the southern part of the Iberian Peninsula as well as in the East, to the south of the Ebro. Their numerous commercial settlements based throughout these coastal strips provided an outlet into Mediterranean commerce for minerals and other resources of pre-Roman Iberia. These installations consisting of little more than warehouses and wharves allowed not only exports, but also the introduction to the Peninsula of products manufactured in the Eastern Mediterranean. This had the indirect effect of the native peninsular cultures adopting certain Eastern characteristics. During the 7th century BC, the Greeks established their first colonies... more... - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ® from Bookmarklet
Low Countries - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
Low Countries - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The Low Countries, in Dutch De Nederlanden, are the historical lands around the low-lying delta of the Rhine, Scheldt, and Meuse rivers, including the modern countries of Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxemburg and parts of northern France and western Germany. Historically the region has its origins in Middle Francia, more precisely its northern part which became the Duchy of Lower Lotharingia. After the desintegration of Lower Lotharingia the Low Countries were brought under the rule of various stronger neighbours, such as the Burgundian Netherlands, French Netherlands, Spanish Netherlands and Austrian Netherlands. At times they reached a form of unity as the United Seventeen Provinces, and later the United Kingdom of the Netherlands." - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ® from Bookmarklet
Bellum se ipsum alet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
Bellum se ipsum alet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bellum se ipsum alet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bellum se ipsum alet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The Latin phrase bellum se ipsum alet or bellum se ipsum alit[1] (English: War feeds itself, French: La guerre doit se nourrir elle-même),[2] and its German rendering Der Krieg ernährt den Krieg[3] describe the military strategy of feeding and funding armies primarily with the potentials of occupied territories. The phrase, coined by Ancient Roman statesman Cato the Elder, is primarily associated with the Thirty Years' War (1618-1648)." - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ® from Bookmarklet
House of Habsburg - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
House of Habsburg - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
House of Habsburg - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
House of Habsburg - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The House of Habsburg or Hapsburg (also known as House of Austria) was an important royal house of Europe and is best known for being an origin of all of the formally elected Holy Roman Emperors between 1452 and 1740, as well as rulers of the Austrian and Spanish Empire and several other countries. Originally from Switzerland, the dynasty first reigned in Austria, which they ruled for over six centuries. A series of dynastic marriages brought Burgundy, Spain, Bohemia, Hungary, and other territories into the inheritance. In the 16th century the senior Spanish and junior Austrian branches of the family separated. As royal houses are by convention determined via the male line, technically the reigning branches of the House of Habsburg became extinct in the 18th century. The Spanish branch ended upon the death of Charles II in 1700 and was replaced by the Anjou branch of the House of Bourbon in the person of his great-nephew Philip V. The Austrian branch went extinct in 1780 with the... more... - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ® from Bookmarklet
Mercenary - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
Mercenary - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"A mercenary is a professional soldier hired by a foreign army, as opposed to a soldier enlisted in the armed forces of a sovereign state. He takes part in armed conflict on many different scales, and is "motivated to take part in the hostilities essentially by the desire for private gain and, in fact, is promised, by or on behalf of a party to the conflict, material compensation substantially in excess of that promised or paid to combatants of similar ranks and functions in the armed forces of that Party" (Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Convention of August 1949).[1][2] A non-conscript professional member of a regular army is not considered to be a mercenary although he gets remuneration for his service. As a result of the assumption that a mercenary is essentially motivated by money, the term "mercenary" usually carries negative connotations, though that can be a compliment in some contexts. There is a blur in the distinction between a "mercenary" and a "foreign volunteer",... more... - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ® from Bookmarklet
Thirty Years' War - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
Thirty Years' War - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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"The Thirty Years' War (1618–1648) was one of the most destructive conflicts in European history. The war was fought primarily (though not exclusively) in Germany and at various points involved most of the countries of Europe. Naval warfare also reached overseas and shaped the colonial formation of future nations. The origins of the conflict and goals of the participants were complex and no single cause can accurately be described as the main reason for the fighting. Initially the war was fought largely as a religious conflict between Protestants and Catholics in the Holy Roman Empire, although disputes over the internal politics and balance of power within the Empire played a significant part. Gradually the war developed into a more general conflict involving most of the European powers.[10][11] In this general phase the war became more a continuation of the Bourbon-Habsburg rivalry for European political pre-eminence, and in turn led to further warfare between France and the... more... - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ® from Bookmarklet
Vulgate - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
"The Vulgate is an early 5th-century Latin version of the Bible, largely the result of the labors of Jerome, who was commissioned by Pope Damasus I in 382 to make a revision of the old Latin translations. By the 13th century this revision had come to be called the versio vulgata, that is, the "commonly used translation",[1] and ultimately it became the definitive and officially promulgated Latin version of the Bible in the Catholic Church." - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ® from Bookmarklet
Vetus Latina - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
"Vetus Latina is a collective name given to the Biblical texts in Latin that were translated before St Jerome's Vulgate Bible (382-405 AD) became the standard Bible for Latin-speaking Western Christians. The phrase Vetus Latina is Latin for Old Latin, and the Vetus Latina is sometimes known as the Old Latin Bible.[1] It was, however, written in Late Latin, not the early version of the Latin language known as Old Latin." - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ® from Bookmarklet
Codex Gigas - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
Codex Gigas - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Codex Gigas - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Codex Gigas - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The Codex Gigas (English: Giant Book) is the largest extant medieval manuscript in the world.[1] It is thought to have been created in the early 13th century in the Benedictine monastery of Podlažice in Bohemia (modern Czech Republic). During the Thirty Years' War in 1648, the entire collection was stolen by the Swedish army as plunder and now it is preserved at the National Library of Sweden in Stockholm.[1] It is also known as the Devil's Bible because of a large illustration of the devil on the inside and the legend surrounding its creation." - © D/\\/IIID ℠ ® from Bookmarklet
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