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  1. Anglo-Saxonism is a cultural belief system developed by British and American intellectuals, politicians, and academics in the 19th century. Racialized Anglo-Saxonism contained both competing and intersecting doctrines, such as Victorian era Old Northernism and the Teutonic germ theory which it relied upon in appropriating Germanic (particularly Norse) cultural and racial origins for the Anglo ...

  2. t. e. Many have seen the status of women in the Victorian era as an illustration of the striking discrepancy between the United Kingdom 's national power and wealth and what many, then and now, consider its appalling social conditions. During this era, whose sobriquet refers to the reign of a female monarch, Queen Victoria, women did not have ...

  3. 1885. In the United Kingdom, the Criminal Law Amendment Act 1885, whose Labouchere Amendment (Clause 11) outlaws oral sex between men—but not women—is given royal assent by Queen Victoria. A popular legend claims that Victoria struck references to lesbianism from the Act because of her refusal to believe that women "did such things"; in ...

  4. American mathematicians born in the 19th century. Florence Eliza Allen (1876–1960) Emil Artin (1898–1962) George David Birkhoff (1884–1944) Maxime Bôcher (1867–1918) Leonard Eugene Dickson (1874–1954), algebra and number theory. Jesse Douglas (1897–1965), Fields Medalist.

  5. Joseph Jean Baptiste Neuberg. Categories: 19th-century scholars. Mathematicians by century. 19th century in mathematics. 19th-century scientists. Hidden categories: Commons category link from Wikidata. CatAutoTOC generates no TOC.

  6. 19th century (disambiguation) The 19th century of the Common Era began on 1 January 1801 and ended on 31 December 1900, according to the Gregorian calendar. 19th century or Nineteenth century may also refer to: 19th century BC. The Nineteenth Century (periodical), a British monthly literary magazine. Category:

  7. American election campaigns in the 19th century. Election Day in Philadelphia (1815) by John Lewis Krimmel, picturing the site of Independence Hall [1] and demonstrating the importance of elections as public occasions. In the 19th century, a number of new methods for conducting American election campaigns developed in the United States.