In 1475.
Leonardo was a famous painter born 1452. He painted the 'Mona Lisa' his most famous work of art.
Michelangelo was born on that date. He was a famous painter and sculptor. Pietà and David are not paintings but sculptures by Michelangelo.
Very famous architect Renzo Piano was born in 1937 in Genoa in Italy. He designed loads of famous buildings including Nemo Science Center in Amsterdam.
As far as I know there are none.
About 24% of the Australian population was born overseas (4,956,863 people) (As of mid-2006).
At the time of the 2006 Census, 43 per cent of all Australians were born overseas or have at least one parent who was born overseas. Of those born overseas, the United Kingdom is the largest overseas-born group (23.5 percent), followed by New Zealand (8.8 percent), China (excluding SARs and Taiwan Province) (4.7 percent) and Italy (4.5 percent).
I'm pretty sure theyre not exactly australians then.
Queen Elizabeth
False, it is actually 40% (according to 2006 census). It could rise to 50% by 2025 if current levels of immigrations continue.See the related link I've added for more info.Note: the above information is a misinterpretation of the news article. The article actually states that 40 per cent of Australia's population were either born overseas or had at least one parent who was born overseas.
Black.
Certainly. Indigenous Australians have been in Australia for thousands of years. Regarding European settlement: yes, Australians of Europeans descent have been in Australia since the first infants were born after the arrival of the First Fleet in 1788.
Paul Hogan is an Australian actor. Overseas, he is best known for portraying the character Crocodile Dundee, but within Australia, he had a unique comedy series, the Paul Hogan Show, which ran for 60 episodes between 1973 and 1984, and was popular amongst Australians for its droll, larrikin humour.
He was born in the Netherlands overseas 1993 May 7
a person born overseas who moved to the united states as a child
15%
Try these two: born in a foreign country and/or born at large.