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In August 2011, Spain's unemployment reached 21.2% (46.2% for youths). Protesters on top of Brazil's National Congress during the 2013 protests in Brazil " La marcha más grande de Chile " in Santiago , during the 2019 Estallido Social George Floyd Protests in May 2020, Minneapolis Protests break out in 2023 across France over the Killing of ...
List of years; Timelines of world history; List of timelines; Chronology; See calendar and list of calendars for other groupings of years.; See history, history by period, and periodization for different organizations of historical events.
AD 21 was a common year starting on Wednesday of the Julian calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Tiberius and Drusus (or, less frequently, year 774 Ab urbe condita ).
Common Era (CE) and Before the Common Era (BCE) are year notations for the Gregorian calendar (and its predecessor, the Julian calendar), the world's most widely used calendar era. Common Era and Before the Common Era are alternatives to the original Anno Domini (AD) and Before Christ (BC) notations used for the same calendar era.
1922 – Mitchell Wallace, Australian rugby league player (d. 2016) [21] 1923 – Paul Brunelle, Canadian singer-songwriter and guitarist (d. 1994) 1923 – Robert Maxwell, Czech-English captain, publisher, and politician (d. 1991) 1924 – Friedrich L. Bauer, German mathematician, computer scientist, and academic (d. 2015)
21 BC in various calendars; Gregorian calendar: 21 BC XXI BC: Ab urbe condita: 733: Ancient Greek era: 189th Olympiad, year 4: Assyrian calendar: 4730: Balinese saka calendar: N/A: Bengali calendar: −614 – −613: Berber calendar: 930: Buddhist calendar: 524: Burmese calendar: −658: Byzantine calendar: 5488–5489: Chinese calendar ...
21 Lessons for the 21st Century is a book written by Israeli author Yuval Noah Harari and published in August 2018 by Spiegel & Grau [1] in the US and by Jonathan Cape [2] in the UK. It is dedicated to the author's husband, Itzik. The book consists of five parts, each containing four or five essays.
The Romanian Communist Party (Romanian: Partidul Comunist Român [parˈtidul komuˈnist roˈmɨn]; PCR) was a communist party in Romania.The successor to the pro-Bolshevik wing of the Socialist Party of Romania, it gave an ideological endorsement to a communist revolution that would replace the social system of the Kingdom of Romania.