- areole (plant anatomy)
cactus: Physical characteristics: …plants by the presence of areoles, small cushionlike structures with trichomes (plant hairs) and, in almost all species, spines or barbed bristles (glochids). Areoles are modified branches, from which flowers, more branches, and leaves (when present) may grow.
- Areopagite Council (Greek council)
Areopagus, earliest aristocratic council of ancient Athens. The name was taken from the Areopagus (“Ares’ Hill”), a low hill northwest of the Acropolis, which was its meeting place. The Areopagite Council probably began as the king’s advisers. Early in the Archaic period it exercised a general and
- Areopagitica (pamphlet by Milton)
Areopagitica, pamphlet by John Milton, published in 1644 to protest an order issued by Parliament the previous year requiring government approval and licensing of all published books. Four earlier pamphlets by the author concerning divorce had met with official disfavour and suppressive measures.
- Areopagitica: A Speech of Mr John Milton for the Liberty of Unlicenc’d Printing, to the Parliament of England (pamphlet by Milton)
Areopagitica, pamphlet by John Milton, published in 1644 to protest an order issued by Parliament the previous year requiring government approval and licensing of all published books. Four earlier pamphlets by the author concerning divorce had met with official disfavour and suppressive measures.
- Areopagus (Greek council)
Areopagus, earliest aristocratic council of ancient Athens. The name was taken from the Areopagus (“Ares’ Hill”), a low hill northwest of the Acropolis, which was its meeting place. The Areopagite Council probably began as the king’s advisers. Early in the Archaic period it exercised a general and
- Areopagus (hill, Athens, Greece)
Athens: Other notable buildings: On the Hill of Ares, the god of war, to the right of the descent from the Propylaea, a legendary jury of gods spared Ares from execution for the murder of the sea god Poseidon’s son. Trials for homicide continued to be heard on this hill through…
- arepa (food)
arepa, a flat round cornmeal cake popular in Central and South America, particularly Colombia and Venezuela. Arepas resemble English muffins and are made with various toppings or fillings, including cheese, butter, or meat. The preparation varies widely. In Venezuela they are often grilled or
- Arequipa (Peru)
Arequipa, city, southern Peru, in the Chili River valley of the Andes Mountains. Arequipa lies at more than 7,550 feet (2,300 metres) above sea level, at the foot of the dormant cone of Misti Volcano, which reaches an elevation of 19,098 feet (5,821 metres). Flanking Misti are Mounts Chachani and
- Arequipa, Volcán de (volcano, Peru)
Misti Volcano, volcano of the Andes mountains of southern Peru. It is flanked by Chachani and Pichupichu volcanoes and rises to 19,098 feet (5,821 meters) above sea level, towering over the city of Arequipa. Its perfect, snowcapped cone is thought to have had religious significance for the Incas
- Ares (planet)
Mars, fourth planet in the solar system in order of distance from the Sun and seventh in size and mass. It is a periodically conspicuous reddish object in the night sky. Mars is designated by the symbol ♂. What do you think? Explore the ProCon debate Sometimes called the Red Planet, Mars has long
- Ares (United States launch vehicles)
Ares, family of two launch vehicles, Ares I and Ares V, for the proposed Constellation program, the crewed U.S. spaceflight program that was scheduled to succeed the space shuttle program and focus on missions to the Moon and Mars. In June 2006 the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
- Ares (Greek mythology)
Ares, in Greek religion, god of war or, more properly, the spirit of battle. Unlike his Roman counterpart, Mars, he was never very popular, and his worship was not extensive in Greece. He represented the distasteful aspects of brutal warfare and slaughter. From at least the time of Homer—who
- Ares, Hill of (hill, Athens, Greece)
Athens: Other notable buildings: On the Hill of Ares, the god of war, to the right of the descent from the Propylaea, a legendary jury of gods spared Ares from execution for the murder of the sea god Poseidon’s son. Trials for homicide continued to be heard on this hill through…
- Areschoug, Johan Erhard (Swedish botanist)
Pelagophycus: Swedish botanist Johan Erhard Areschoug described it in 1876 as Nereocystis gigantea, based on a specimen collected at Santa Catalina Island by Swedish-born scientist Gustav Eisen. In 1881, however, having recognized elk kelp as distinct from other Nereocystis, Areschoug renamed it Pelagophycus giganteus, thereby introducing the genus…
- Aresti, Gabriel (Spanish writer)
Basque literature: The 20th and 21st centuries: Gabriel Aresti incorporated elements of older Basque poetry while also addressing socialist themes. By veering away from such predecessors as Orixe, Lizardi, and Lauaxeta, however, Aresti’s work gave new impetus to Basque poetry. His collection Harri eta herri (1964; “Stone and People”) contains his most…
- Aretaeus Of Cappadocia (Greek physician)
Aretaeus Of Cappadocia was a Greek physician from Cappadocia who practiced in Rome and Alexandria, led a revival of Hippocrates’ teachings, and is thought to have ranked second only to the father of medicine himself in the application of keen observation and ethics to the art. In principle he
- aretalogy (religious literature)
biblical literature: Form criticism: …stories about him comprised an aretalogy (from aretē, “virtue”; also manifestation of divine power, miracle). Aretalogies were frequently used to represent the essential creed and belief of a religious or philosophical movement. The Life of Apollonius of Tyana, a Neo-Pythagorean philosopher and wonder-worker (transmitted by the Greek writer Philostratus), was…
- Aretas (king of Ghassān)
Ghassanid dynasty: The Ghassanid king al-Ḥārith ibn Jabalah (reigned 529–569) supported the Byzantines against Sasanian Persia and was given the title patricius in 529 by the emperor Justinian. Al-Ḥārith was a miaphysite Christian; he helped to revive the miaphysite Syrian church and supported miaphysite development despite the disapproval of Orthodox…
- Aretas III (Nabataean king)
Nabataean: …after 85 bc their king Aretas III ruled Damascus and Coele Syria (Lebanon). Upon the Roman general Pompey’s entry into Palestine (63 bc), Aretas became a Roman vassal, retaining Damascus and his other conquests; Damascus, however, was later annexed by the Roman emperor Nero (reigned ad 54–68).
- Aretas IV (Nabataean king)
Arabian religion: North and central Arabia: …greatest wealth and power, under Aretas IV (8 bce–40 ce), their territory extended from al-Ḥijr in the south, northward past Petra, along the northern route east of the Jordan River as far as the Ḥawrān region south of Damascus. The Nabataean territory—except for its southern part—was incorporated into the Roman…
- arete (philosophy)
education: Origins: In addition, the idea of aretē was becoming central to Greek life. The epics of Hesiod and Homer glorified physical and military prowess and promoted the ideal of the cultivated patriot-warrior who displayed this cardinal virtue of aretē—a concept difficult to translate but embodying the virtues of military skill, moral…
- aretē (philosophy)
education: Origins: In addition, the idea of aretē was becoming central to Greek life. The epics of Hesiod and Homer glorified physical and military prowess and promoted the ideal of the cultivated patriot-warrior who displayed this cardinal virtue of aretē—a concept difficult to translate but embodying the virtues of military skill, moral…
- arête (glacial landform)
arête, (French: “ridge”), in geology, a sharp-crested serrate ridge separating the heads of opposing valleys (cirques) that formerly were occupied by Alpine glaciers. It has steep sides formed by the collapse of unsupported rock, undercut by continual freezing and thawing (glacial sapping; see
- Arethas (Byzantine bishop)
Apologist: Apologists and works: In 914 Arethas, bishop of Caesarea Cappadociae, had a collection of early apologies copied for his library. Many of the later manuscripts were copied in the 16th century, when the Council of Trent was discussing the nature of tradition. The genuine writings of the Apologists were virtually…
- Arethusa (Greek mythology)
Arethusa, in Greek mythology, a nymph who gave her name to a spring in Elis and to another on the island of Ortygia, near Syracuse. The river god Alpheus fell in love with Arethusa, who was in the retinue of Artemis. Arethusa fled to Ortygia, where she was changed into a spring. Alpheus, however,
- Arethusa bulbosa (plant)
dragon’s-mouth, (Arethusa bulbosa), species of terrestrial orchid (family Orchidaceae) found only in North American bogs. The plant is the only species in the genus Arethusa. The dragon’s-mouth orchid is a perennial plant with a small corm and a single grasslike leaf. It produces a solitary reddish
- Aretino, Leonardo (Italian scholar)
Leonardo Bruni was an Italian humanist scholar of the Renaissance. Bruni was secretary to the papal chancery from 1405 and served as chancellor of Florence from 1427 until his death in 1444. His Historiarum Florentini populi libri XII (1610; “Twelve Books of Histories of the Florentine People”) is
- Aretino, Pietro (Italian author)
Pietro Aretino was an Italian poet, prose writer, and dramatist celebrated throughout Europe in his time for his bold and insolent literary attacks on the powerful. His fiery letters and dialogues are of great biographical and topical interest. Although Aretino was the son of an Arezzo shoemaker,
- Areus I (king of Sparta)
Antigonus II Gonatas: To avert this danger, King Areus of Sparta and the city of Athens—urged on by Ptolemy II of Egypt—declared a war for the liberation of Greece (the Chremonidean War, 267–261). Although the Egyptian fleet had blockaded the Saronic Gulf, Antigonus defeated Areus near Corinth in 265 and then besieged Athens.…
- Arevaci (Celtiberian tribe)
Arevaci, a Celtiberian tribe, thought by Classical writers to have formed from the mingling of pre-Roman Iberians and Celts, who inhabited an area near Numantia and Uxama in what is now Spain. The Celtiberians excelled at horsemanship, fighting, and metalworking. They wore sewn garments made of
- Arévalo Bermejo, Juan José (president of Guatemala)
Juan José Arévalo was the president of Guatemala (1945–51), who pursued a nationalistic foreign policy while internally encouraging the labour movement and instituting far-reaching social reforms. Arévalo was educated at the University of Guatemala and the University of La Plata (1928–34) in
- Arévalo Martínez, Rafael (Guatemalan writer)
Rafael Arévalo Martínez was a novelist, short-story writer, poet, diplomat, and director of Guatemala’s national library for more than 20 years. Though Arévalo Martínez’s fame has waned, he is still considered important because of his short stories, one in particular. Arévalo Martínez was director
- Arévalo, Bernardo (Guatemalan politician and writer)
Guatemala: Guatemala in the 21st century: …the vote) was long-shot candidate Bernardo Arévalo of the Seed Movement (Movimiento Semilla), a congressman and writer whose father, Juan José Arévalo, had been Guatemala’s president from 1945 to 1951. In the elections for the 160-seat Congress, the Let’s Go party finished first, securing 39 seats, followed by UNE, with…
- Arévalo, Juan José (president of Guatemala)
Juan José Arévalo was the president of Guatemala (1945–51), who pursued a nationalistic foreign policy while internally encouraging the labour movement and instituting far-reaching social reforms. Arévalo was educated at the University of Guatemala and the University of La Plata (1928–34) in
- Arévalo, Luis de (Spanish architect)
Churrigueresque: …the Cartuja of Granada (1727–64), Luis de Arévalo and Francisco Manuel Vásquez created an interior that, if not as delicate or as ingenious as that designed by Tomé, is as typically Churrigueresque. The architects drew from other sources for the thick moldings, undulating lines, and repetition of pattern.
- Arewelahayerên (language)
Armenian language: …(Arewmtahayerên) and Eastern Armenian (Arewelahayerên)—and many dialects are spoken. About 50 dialects were known before 1915, when the Armenian population of Turkey was drastically reduced by means of massacre and forced exodus; some of these dialects were mutually unintelligible.
- Arewmtahayerên (language)
Armenian language: …two written varieties—Western Armenian (Arewmtahayerên) and Eastern Armenian (Arewelahayerên)—and many dialects are spoken. About 50 dialects were known before 1915, when the Armenian population of Turkey was drastically reduced by means of massacre and forced exodus; some of these dialects were mutually unintelligible.
- Arezzo (Italy)
Arezzo, city, Toscana (Tuscany) regione, north-central Italy, in a fertile plain near the confluence of the Chiana and Arno rivers southeast of Florence. An important Etruscan city, it was known to the Romans as Arretium and was noted for its red-clay Arretine pottery. A flourishing commune in the
- Arezzo, Guittone d’ (Italian poet)
Guittone d’Arezzo was the founder of the Tuscan school of courtly poetry. Knowledge of Guittone’s life comes mainly from his writings. Born near Arezzo, he travelled for commercial reasons, being an exile from Arezzo after 1256 for his Guelf sympathies. Guittone became the centre of an admiring
- ARF (Asian organization)
ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF), the first regionwide Asia-Pacific multilateral forum for official consultations on peace and security issues. An outgrowth of the annual ministerial-level meeting of members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and the states serving as ASEAN’s “dialogue
- Arfe, Enrique de (Spanish goldsmith)
metalwork: 16th century: …New World, goldsmiths such as Enrique and Juan de Arfe produced vast containers for the Host known as custodia. The most important Portuguese work, the Belém monstrance, created by Gil Vicente in 1506 for Belém Monastery near Lisbon, is still Gothic in style; later, Portugal developed its own style, related…
- Arfe, Juan de (Spanish goldsmith)
metalwork: 16th century: …goldsmiths such as Enrique and Juan de Arfe produced vast containers for the Host known as custodia. The most important Portuguese work, the Belém monstrance, created by Gil Vicente in 1506 for Belém Monastery near Lisbon, is still Gothic in style; later, Portugal developed its own style, related to Spanish…
- Arfersiorfik Fjord (fjord, Greenland)
Arfersiorfik Fjord, fjord in western Greenland, extending east from Davis Strait to the inland icecap. It is 95 miles (152 km) long with a maximum width of 15 miles (24 km). Its arms receive several glaciers, including the Nordenskiölds. Niaqornaarsuk, a settlement on the northern shore near the
- Arfons, Art (American race–car driver)
Art Arfons was an American automotive racer, three-time holder of the world’s land-speed record for wheeled vehicles. Arfons worked in his father’s feed-mill business in Akron, Ohio, before and after service in the U.S. Navy (1943–46), which trained him in diesel mechanics. He began his career as a
- Arfons, Arthur Eugene (American race–car driver)
Art Arfons was an American automotive racer, three-time holder of the world’s land-speed record for wheeled vehicles. Arfons worked in his father’s feed-mill business in Akron, Ohio, before and after service in the U.S. Navy (1943–46), which trained him in diesel mechanics. He began his career as a
- ARFSOM (Asian meeting)
ASEAN Regional Forum: …organization is supported by the ARF Senior Officials Meeting (ARFSOM), which is held each May. The ARFSOM meeting is attended by senior foreign ministry officials from all ARF countries; leading defense department officials also attend. The meetings provide an exchange of views on regional political and security issues and developments.
- arfvedsonite (mineral)
arfvedsonite, amphibole mineral, an iron-rich sodium silicate. Lithium and magnesium replace iron in the structure to form eckermannite. Both minerals characteristically occur as dark-green crystals in alkali igneous rocks and their associated pegmatites. For chemical formula and detailed physical
- Arfwedson, Johan August (Swedish chemist)
lithium: Occurrence and production: …in 1817 by Swedish chemist Johan August Arfwedson in the mineral petalite, lithium is also found in brine deposits and as salts in mineral springs; its concentration in seawater is 0.1 part per million (ppm). Lithium is also found in pegmatite ores, such as spodumene (LiAlSi2O6) and lepidolite (of varying…
- Arg-e Bam (ancient citadel, Iran)
Bam: …of the ancient citadel (arg) Arg-e Bam, once one of the world’s largest mud-brick complexes. Located on a hilltop, the citadel consisted of a series of three concentric walls made of mud brick and palm timbers, the outer wall of which enclosed the old city. Bam’s highest point, the citadel…
- argali (mammal)
argali, (Ovis ammon), the largest living wild sheep, native to the highlands of Central Asia. Argali is a Mongolian word for “ram.” There are eight subspecies of argali. Mature rams of large-bodied subspecies stand 125 cm (49 inches) high at the shoulder and weigh more than 140 kg (300 pounds).
- Argall, Sir Samuel (English sailor)
Sir Samuel Argall was an English sailor and adventurer who defended British colonists in North America against the French. Employed by the Virginia Company of London, Argall was commissioned in 1609 to discover a shorter route to Virginia and to fish for sturgeon. In 1610 he was named admiral of
- argan (plant)
Morocco: Plant and animal life: …Essaouira, vast open forests of argan (Argania spinoza) are found. Unique to southwestern Morocco, this tree has a hard fruit that produces a prized cooking oil.
- argan oil (vegetable oil)
argan oil, vegetable oil extracted from the seeds of the argan tree (Sideroxylon spinosum, formerly Argania spinosa). Food-grade argan oil, made from roasted seeds, is used for cooking, while cosmetic-grade argan oil is typically made from unroasted seeds and is popular in hair and skin treatments.
- Argand burner (oil lamp)
Argand burner, first scientifically constructed oil lamp, patented in 1784 in England by a Swiss, Aimé Argand. The first basic change in lamps in thousands of years, it applied a principle that was later adapted to gas burners. The Argand burner consisted of a cylindrical wick housed between two
- Argand diagram (mathematics)
Argand diagram, graphic portrayal of complex numbers, those of the form x + yi, in which x and y are real numbers and i is the square root of −1. It was devised by the Swiss mathematician Jean Robert Argand about 1806. A similar representation had been proposed by the Danish surveyor Caspar Wessel
- Argand, Aimé (Swiss inventor)
Argand burner: …in England by a Swiss, Aimé Argand. The first basic change in lamps in thousands of years, it applied a principle that was later adapted to gas burners. The Argand burner consisted of a cylindrical wick housed between two concentric metal tubes. The inner tube provided a passage through which…
- Argand, Jean Robert (French mathematician)
mathematics: Elliptic functions: …several French writers, notably Jean-Robert Argand. A consensus emerged that complex numbers should be thought of as pairs of real numbers, with suitable rules for their addition and multiplication so that the pair (0, 1) was a square root of −1 (i). The underlying meaning of such a number…
- Argania spinosa (plant)
Morocco: Plant and animal life: …Essaouira, vast open forests of argan (Argania spinoza) are found. Unique to southwestern Morocco, this tree has a hard fruit that produces a prized cooking oil.
- Argania spinoza (plant)
Morocco: Plant and animal life: …Essaouira, vast open forests of argan (Argania spinoza) are found. Unique to southwestern Morocco, this tree has a hard fruit that produces a prized cooking oil.
- Argaric Culture (European culture)
history of Europe: Control over resources: Of these, the Argaric Culture in southeastern Iberia comprised nucleated village settlements similar to those from Los Millares but with even greater sophistication and with a changed funerary rite. The deceased, richly adorned with diadems, arm rings, and pins and accompanied by metal tools, were individually entombed in…
- Argasidae (arachnid)
tick: Soft ticks differ from hard ticks by feeding intermittently, laying several batches of eggs, passing through several nymphal stages, and carrying on their developmental cycles in the home or nest of the host rather than in fields.
- Argead Dynasty (Macedonian ruling house)
Argead Dynasty, ruling house of ancient Macedonia from about 700 to about 311 bc; under their leadership the Macedonian kingdom was created and gradually gained predominance throughout Greece. From about 700 the founder of the dynasty, Perdiccas I, led the people who called themselves Macedonians
- Argeiphontes (Greek mythology)
Hermes, Greek god, son of Zeus and the Pleiad Maia; often identified with the Roman Mercury and with Casmilus or Cadmilus, one of the Cabeiri. His name is probably derived from herma (see herm), the Greek word for a heap of stones, such as was used in the country to indicate boundaries or as a
- Argelander, Friedrich Wilhelm August (Prussian astronomer)
Friedrich Wilhelm August Argelander was a German astronomer who established the study of variable stars as an independent branch of astronomy and is renowned for his great catalog listing the positions and magnitudes of 324,188 stars. He studied at the University of Königsberg, Prussia, where he
- Argemone (plant)
prickly poppy, (genus Argemone), genus of approximately 30 species of North American and West Indian plants (one species is endemic to Hawaii) belonging to the poppy family (Papaveraceae). Prickly poppies are cultivated as garden ornamentals but frequently become troublesome weeds when growing
- Argemone grandiflora (plant)
prickly poppy: …annuals in sunny places are A. grandiflora, with large cup-shaped white or yellow blooms; the crested, or thistle, poppy (A. platyceras), with 6- to 10-cm (2- to 4-inch) white or yellow blooms; and the Mexican poppy (A. mexicana), with smaller yellow blooms and light green leaves with white vein markings.
- Argemone hispida (plant)
prickly poppy: Rough prickly poppy (Argemone hispida), of the Rocky Mountains, is densely prickled. Common garden species grown as annuals in sunny places are A. grandiflora, with large cup-shaped white or yellow blooms; the crested, or thistle, poppy (A. platyceras), with 6- to 10-cm (2- to 4-inch)…
- Argemone mexicana (plant)
prickly poppy: …or yellow blooms; and the Mexican poppy (A. mexicana), with smaller yellow blooms and light green leaves with white vein markings.
- Argemone platyceras (plant)
prickly poppy: …white or yellow blooms; the crested, or thistle, poppy (A. platyceras), with 6- to 10-cm (2- to 4-inch) white or yellow blooms; and the Mexican poppy (A. mexicana), with smaller yellow blooms and light green leaves with white vein markings.
- argemony (plant)
prickly poppy, (genus Argemone), genus of approximately 30 species of North American and West Indian plants (one species is endemic to Hawaii) belonging to the poppy family (Papaveraceae). Prickly poppies are cultivated as garden ornamentals but frequently become troublesome weeds when growing
- Argenis (poem by Barclay)
John Barclay: …satirist and Latin poet whose Argenis (1621), a long poem of romantic adventure, had great influence on the development of the romance in the 17th century.
- Argenlieu, Georges-Thierry d’ (French admiral)
Vietnam: The First Indochina War: …revealed in the decision of Georges-Thierry d’Argenlieu, the high commissioner for Indochina, to proclaim Cochinchina an autonomous republic in June 1946. Further negotiations did not resolve the basic differences between the French and the Viet Minh. In late November 1946 French naval vessels bombarded Haiphong, causing several thousand civilian casualties;…
- Argens, Jean-Baptiste de Boyer, marquis d’ (French author)
Jean-Baptiste de Boyer, marquis d’Argens was a French writer who helped disseminate the skeptical ideas of the Enlightenment by addressing his polemical writings on philosophy, religion, and history to a popular readership. Argens’s writings simplified the unorthodox empirical reasoning of such
- Argenson, René-Louis de Voyer de Paulmy, marquis d’ (French minister)
René-Louis de Voyer de Paulmy, marquis d’Argenson was a French minister of foreign affairs under King Louis XV from 1744 to 1747. The son of a lawyer, he received legal training and, from 1720 to 1724, served as intendant (royal agent) in Hainaut. As patron of the Club de l’Entresol in Paris, he
- argent (heraldry)
heraldry: The field: …the metals or (gold) or argent (silver), one of the colors gules (red), azure (blue), vert (green), purpure (purple), or sable (black), or one of the furs ermine (a white field with black spots), ermines (a black field with white spots), erminois (gold field with black spots), pean (black field…
- Argenta (Arkansas, United States)
North Little Rock, city, Pulaski county, central Arkansas, U.S., on the Arkansas River opposite Little Rock. It was settled in 1812 as De Cantillon, became Huntersville in 1853, and was later renamed Argenta for the Hotel Argenta, built there in the late 1850s. The community developed after the
- Argenta (Italy)
Argenta, town, Emilia-Romagna region, northeastern Italy, on the Fiume (river) Reno, southeast of Ferrara city. It has some fine medieval and Renaissance buildings, including the churches of S. Domenico and S. Francesco, and a notable picture gallery. The town was flooded by the German forces
- argentaffin cell (anatomy)
argentaffin cell, one of the round or partly flattened cells occurring in the lining tissue of the digestive tract and containing granules thought to be of secretory function. These epithelial cells, though common throughout the digestive tract, are most concentrated in the small intestine and
- Argentan lace (lace)
Argentan lace, lace produced in Normandy from the 17th century. The town of Argentan lies in the same lace-making area of Normandy as Alençon, and its products were for some time referred to as Alençon lace. However, technical differences, particularly in the background mesh, were distinguishable
- Argentariorum, Porta (gate, Rome, Italy)
Western sculpture: Antonine and Severan periods: …documentary painting; in the smaller Porta Argentariorum in Rome, erected by bankers and cattle dealers in honour of the emperor in the following year, there are stiff, hieratic, funeral poses; and above all in the still more remarkable four-way arch set up at Leptis (Lepcis) Magna in Tripolitania to commemorate…
- Argenteau, Florimund Mercy d’ (Austrian diplomat)
Florimund Mercy, Count d’Argenteau was an Austrian diplomat who, at the outset of the French Revolution, attempted to maintain the Austro-French alliance and to save the life of the Austrian-born French queen Marie-Antoinette. Entering the diplomatic service in 1751, Mercy served at the Sardinian
- Argentera, Colle dell’ (mountain pass, Europe)
Maddalena Pass, gap between the Cottian Alps (north) and the Maritime Alps (south). The pass lies at 6,548 feet (1,996 m) on the French-Italian border, 12 miles (19 km) east-northeast of Barcelonnette, Fr. A road (1870) across the pass connects Cuneo, Italy, with Barcelonnette. Hannibal reputedly
- Argenteuil (France)
Argenteuil, town, Val-d’Oise département, Île-de-France région, northern France. It lies along the north bank of the Seine River, northwest of Paris. The town’s name comes from silver (argent) deposits exploited there by the Gauls. Argenteuil grew up around a convent that was founded there in the
- Argentia (former community, Newfoundland, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada)
Argentia, former unincorporated community, southeastern Newfoundland, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. It is situated along the west coast of the Avalon Peninsula just to the north of the town of Placentia (into which Argentia was administratively incorporated in 1994) and overlooks Placentia
- argentier (French official position)
Jacques Coeur: …the king and became an argentier (steward of the royal expenditure and banker of the court) and then a member of the king’s council. He was put in charge of the collection of taxes, as commissaire in the estates’ assemblies of the Languedoc region and as inspector general of the…
- Argentière, Col de l’ (mountain pass, Europe)
Maddalena Pass, gap between the Cottian Alps (north) and the Maritime Alps (south). The pass lies at 6,548 feet (1,996 m) on the French-Italian border, 12 miles (19 km) east-northeast of Barcelonnette, Fr. A road (1870) across the pass connects Cuneo, Italy, with Barcelonnette. Hannibal reputedly
- Argentina
Argentina, country of South America, covering most of the southern portion of the continent. The world’s eighth largest country, Argentina occupies an area more extensive than Mexico and the U.S. state of Texas combined. It encompasses immense plains, deserts, tundra, and forests, as well as tall
- Argentina (work by Martínez Estrada)
Ezequiel Martínez Estrada: …del cielo (1924; “Heaven’s Reasons”), Argentina (1927), and Humoresca (1929). These displayed very complex techniques. Language and imagery are often tinted with humour, conveying a satirical view reminiscent of Francisco Gómez de Quevedo y Villegas, the master satirist of Spain’s Golden Age.
- Argentina silus (fish)
argentine: Argentines of the species Argentina silus are silvery fishes about 45 cm (18 inches) long; they live about 145–545 m (480–1,800 feet) below the surface and are sometimes caught by fishermen.
- Argentina, flag of
horizontally striped blue-white-blue national flag, with a brown-bordered central golden sun. Its width-to-length ratio is 5 to 8.The pale blue (celeste) cockades worn by patriots in May 1810, when the Spanish viceroy in Buenos Aires yielded authority to the local government, and the uniforms worn
- Argentina, history of
history of Argentina, a survey of the important events and people in the history of Argentina from the time of European settlement. The population of the area now called Argentina may have totaled 300,000 before the arrival of the Europeans. Some of the Indigenous peoples were nomadic hunters and
- Argentina, La (Spanish dancer)
La Argentina was a dancer who originated the Neoclassical style of Spanish dancing and helped establish the Spanish dance as a theatrical art. She studied ballet with her parents, both of whom were professional dancers of Spanish birth. At the age of 11 she became premiere danseuse at the Madrid
- Argentina, República
Argentina, country of South America, covering most of the southern portion of the continent. The world’s eighth largest country, Argentina occupies an area more extensive than Mexico and the U.S. state of Texas combined. It encompasses immense plains, deserts, tundra, and forests, as well as tall
- argentine (fish)
argentine, any fish of the family Argentinidae, small, outwardly smeltlike fishes found in deeper waters of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. The family is usually placed in the order Osmeriformes. Argentines of the species Argentina silus are silvery fishes about 45 cm (18 inches) long; they live
- Argentine (Kansas, United States)
Kansas City: South of the Kansas, Argentine grew up around the Santa Fe Railway shops and rail yards and became the site of a smelter. These, except for Argentine (annexed in 1910), combined as a first-class city on March 6, 1886, taking the name Kansas City. Rosedale, also south of the…
- Argentine Abyssal Plain (submarine plain, Atlantic Ocean)
Argentine Basin: …southwestern margins, are called the Argentine Abyssal Plain and reach a maximum depth of 20,381 feet (6,212 m). The basin is bounded by the Rio Grande Rise (north), the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (east), the Falkland Rise (south), and the South American continental shelf (west).
- Argentine Anticommunist Alliance (political party, Argentina)
José López Rega: …being the instigator of the Argentine Anticommunist Alliance, one of the first right-wing death squads to be formed in Argentina in the 1970s. On July 11 he resigned and left for Spain after having been hurriedly designated ambassador extraordinary by Isabel Perón. At year’s end, under pressure from the military,…
- Argentine Basin (submarine basin, Atlantic Ocean)
Argentine Basin, submarine basin in the floor of the Atlantic Ocean, lying directly east of Argentina. Its deepest sections, the western and southwestern margins, are called the Argentine Abyssal Plain and reach a maximum depth of 20,381 feet (6,212 m). The basin is bounded by the Rio Grande Rise
- Argentine blue-eyed grass (plant)
blue-eyed grass: Another South American species, the pale yellow-eyed grass, or Argentine blue-eyed grass (S. striatum), bears a spike up to 90 cm (35 inches) tall with clusters of creamy white blooms.
- Argentine boa constrictor (reptile)
boa constrictor: The Argentine boa constrictor (Boa constrictor occidentalis) is silvery gray with an unusual network pattern.