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4962 matches to St
Craig, James. 1871-1940. First Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, 1921-.
Crane, Stephen. 1871-1900. US writer. Red Badge of Courage 1895. Short stories.
Cranmer, Thomas. 1489-1556. First Protestant Archbishop of Canterbury. Executed by Queen Mary.
Crapper, Thomas. 1836-1910. British plumber. Installed Queen Victoria’s toilets. Manufacturer, but not inventor of syphonic flush toilets.
Crassus, Lucius. 140-91BC. Roman statesman, orator. Banished non-citizens, causing Social War.
Crassus, Marcus. c115-53BC. First Roman triumvirate member. Suppressed Spartacus’ slave revolt.
Crazy Horse. c1842-1877. Sioux Indian chief vs Custer at Little Bighorn.
Crédit Mobilier of America. 1865-72. Scandal involving illegal profits, graft in Union Pacific Railroad construction.
Creek War. 1813-14. Creek Indians defeated by Jackson, give up lands to US.
Crete, Battle. 1941. First German airborne invasion.
Crick, Francis. 1916-. British discoverer of DNA structure with Watson 1953.

Cricket. 1598 derived from Club ball. 1877 First Test Match Australia/England.
Crimean War. 1853-6. Russian attempt to get a Mediterranean port stopped by Turkey, England, France, Sardinia. Dispute over Holy places in Palestine.
Crispi, Francesco. 1819-1901. Italian Prime Minister 1887~96. Thousand.
Crispin and Crispinian, Sts. -c285. Martyred patron saints of shoemakers.
Cristofori, Bartolomeo. 1655-1731. First piano, c1710.
Cro-Magnon Man. 30,000BC-. First Homo Sapiens.
Croce, Benedetto. 1866-1952. Italian statesman, philosopher. Opposed fascism.
Croesus. -546BC. Last King of Lydia 560-.
Crofter. Scottish tenant farmer with right of common pasture.
Crookes, William. 1832-1919. English physicist. Invented Crookes tube. Discovered thallium. Radiometer.
Crosby, Bing. 1904-77. US singer and actor. White Christmas-best selling record until 1998.
Cross, Richard. 1823-1914. British statesman: First urban renewal act.
Crucifixion. Abolished 4C by Constantine.
Crusades. 1095-1272. European Christian wars to regain Holy Land after Seljuk Turks take Jerusalem in 1072. Literature and the arts benefitted from Eastern cultural infusion. Peasants 1096. Annihilated. First. 1096-99. Genoa financed Godfrey of Bouillon to recapture Jerusalem. Only successful crusade. Second. 1147-49. Louis VII and Conrad III pillage Byzantium. Third. 1189-92. Richard I and Philip II Truce with Saladin allows access to Jerusalem. Fourth. 1202-4. French and Flemish nobles conquer, sack Constantinople, form Latin Empire. Childrens. 1212. Stephen of Cloyes led 30,000 unarmed French youths. Nicholas of Cologne led 20,000 German. All died or enslaved. Fifth. 1218-21. John of Brienne in Egypt. Sixth. 1228-29. Frederick II crowned king of Jerusalem. Seventh. 1248-54. St Louis of France captured by Egypt and ransomed. Eighth. 1270. St Louis dies of plague. Ninth. 1271-2. Prince Edward of England.