• Bajada de Santa Fe (Argentina)

    Paraná, city, capital of Entre Ríos provincia (province), northeastern Argentina. It lies on the Paraná River, opposite Santa Fe, with which it is connected by a subfluvial road tunnel. Founded as a parish in 1730 and formerly called Bajada de Santa Fe, the city had little importance until 1853,

  • Bājah (Tunisia)

    Béja, town in northern Tunisia, located in the hills on the northern edge of the Majardah (Medjerda) valley. Béja is built on the site of ancient Vacca (or Vaga)—a Punic town and Roman colony. It became an important agricultural market beginning in the 1st century bce and was conquered by the

  • Bajan (language)

    Barbados: Ethnic groups and languages: …and a nonstandard English called Bajan is also spoken.

  • Bajao (people)

    Sama, one of the largest and most diverse ethnolinguistic groups of insular Southeast Asia. The Sama live mainly in the southern half of the Sulu Archipelago, in the southwestern Philippines, although significant populations also live along the coasts of northeastern Borneo—primarily in the

  • Bajau (people)

    Sama, one of the largest and most diverse ethnolinguistic groups of insular Southeast Asia. The Sama live mainly in the southern half of the Sulu Archipelago, in the southwestern Philippines, although significant populations also live along the coasts of northeastern Borneo—primarily in the

  • Bajaw (people)

    Sama, one of the largest and most diverse ethnolinguistic groups of insular Southeast Asia. The Sama live mainly in the southern half of the Sulu Archipelago, in the southwestern Philippines, although significant populations also live along the coasts of northeastern Borneo—primarily in the

  • Bajazet (play by Racine)

    Bajazet, tragedy in five acts by Jean Racine, performed in 1672 and published the same year. The play, considered one of Racine’s noble tragedies, was based on an actual incident that occurred in the Ottoman Empire in the 1630s. The drama opens with the grand vizier Acomat worried about his

  • Bajer, Fredrik (Danish politician)

    Fredrik Bajer was a Danish reformer and politician, who was a co-winner (with Klas Pontus Arnoldson) of the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1908. Bajer entered the Danish army but was discharged when it was reduced after the 1864 war with Prussia. He then started working for the emancipation of women, for

  • Baji Rao Ballal Balaji Bhat (Marāṭhā peshwa)

    Baji Rao I, peshwa, or chief minister, of the Maratha confederacy from 1720 to 1740 during the reign of Shahu (1708–49). Baji Rao’s conquests were one of several contributors to the decay of the Mughal Empire, especially under Emperor Muḥammad Shah (1719–48). Baji Rao succeeded his father, Balaji

  • Baji Rao I (Marāṭhā peshwa)

    Baji Rao I, peshwa, or chief minister, of the Maratha confederacy from 1720 to 1740 during the reign of Shahu (1708–49). Baji Rao’s conquests were one of several contributors to the decay of the Mughal Empire, especially under Emperor Muḥammad Shah (1719–48). Baji Rao succeeded his father, Balaji

  • Baji Rao II (Maratha peshwa)

    Maratha Wars: …was caused by the peshwa Baji Rao II’s defeat by the Holkars (one of the leading Maratha clans) and his acceptance of British protection by the Treaty of Bassein in December 1802. The Sindhia and the Bhonsle families contested the agreement, but they were defeated, respectively, at Laswari and Delhi

  • Bajina Bašta (Serbia)

    Serbia: Energy: The Bajina Bašta development on the Drina River ranks second as a hydroelectric generating source. Because the Drina forms part of Serbia’s border with Bosnia and Herzegovina, this creates a difficult problem for allocating power production.

  • Bajío (region, Mexico)

    Bajío, region on the Mexican Plateau, west-central Mexico. Bajío has been an important agricultural region since the 19th century and is known for its fertile soil, temperate climate, and adequate rainfall. Wheat, corn (maize), chickpeas, beans, and various fruits are the principal crops. Bajío is

  • Bajirao Mastani (film by Bhansali [2015])

    Bollywood: Partnerships: …and Deepika Padukone (Ram-Leela [2013], Bajirao Mastani [2015], Padmaavat [2018]) to Sanjay Leela Bhansali. Bachchan is known for collaborating on screen with a number of his male contemporaries, such as Vinod Khanna (Amar Akbar Anthony), Shashi Kapoor (Deewaar), Dharmendra (Sholay), and Rishi Kapoor (Amar Akbar Anthony).

  • Bajkal, Ozero (lake, Russia)

    Lake Baikal, lake located in the southern part of eastern Siberia within the republic of Buryatia and Irkutsk oblast (province) of Russia. It is the oldest existing freshwater lake on Earth (20 million–25 million years old), as well as the deepest continental body of water, having a maximum depth

  • Bajki i przypowieści (work by Krasicki)

    Ignacy Krasicki: The fables in Bajki i przypowieści (1779) and Bajki nowe (1803) are among his best work. Typical of these fables is the four-line “The Lamb and the Wolves,” which is the story of an encounter between three powerful predators and a weak little lamb. When the lamb asks…

  • Bajkonur (space center, Kazakhstan)

    Baikonur Cosmodrome, former Soviet and current Russian space centre in south-central Kazakhstan. Baikonur was a Soviet code name for the centre, but American analysts often called it Tyuratam, after the railroad station at Tyuratam (Leninsk), the nearest large city. The Baikonur Cosmodrome lies on

  • Bajo (people)

    Sama, one of the largest and most diverse ethnolinguistic groups of insular Southeast Asia. The Sama live mainly in the southern half of the Sulu Archipelago, in the southwestern Philippines, although significant populations also live along the coasts of northeastern Borneo—primarily in the

  • bajo sexto (musical instrument)

    Tejano: …instrument backed rhythmically by the bajo sexto (a 12-string guitar) and an acoustic bass guitar. Its initial repertoire included waltzes, polkas, mazurkas, and rancheros. In modern conjunto, a drum kit was added and the acoustic bass replaced by an electric one. Conjunto’s best-known performers in the 1920s and ’30s, accordionists…

  • Bajo tu clara sombra y otros poemas (work by Paz)

    Octavio Paz: His reflection on that experience, Bajo tu clara sombra y otros poemas (“Beneath Your Clear Shadow and Other Poems”), was published in Spain in 1937 and revealed him as a writer of real promise. Before returning home Paz visited Paris, where Surrealism and its adherents exerted a profound influence on…

  • Bajocasses (France)

    Bayeux, town, Calvados département, Normandy région, northwestern France. It lies on the Aure River, northwest of Caen. As Bajocasses, it was a capital of the Gauls, then, as Augustodurum and, later, Civitas Baiocassium, it was an important Roman city that became a bishopric in the 4th century.

  • Bajocian Stage (stratigraphy)

    Bajocian Stage, second of the four divisions of the Middle Jurassic Series, representing all rocks formed worldwide during the Bajocian Age, which occurred between 170.3 million and 168.3 million years ago during the Jurassic Period. (Some researchers have proposed a longer time span for this stage

  • Bajokwe (people)

    Chokwe, Bantu-speaking people who inhabit the southern part of Congo (Kinshasa) from the Kwango River to the Lualaba; northeastern Angola; and, since 1920, the northwestern corner of Zambia. They live in woodland savanna intersected with strips of rainforest along the rivers, swamps, and

  • Bajor, Gizi (Hungarian actress)

    Gizi Bajor was a Hungarian actress known not only for her magnetic charm and attractiveness but also for her craftsmanship and versatility. Bajor graduated into the National Theatre from the Academy of Theatrical Art in 1914 and was associated with that theatre throughout her career, becoming a

  • bajra (plant)

    Pennisetum: Pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum), an annual species, is cultivated in tropical areas for its edible grain. Several varieties of feathertop (P. villosum), native to Ethiopia, are cultivated as ornamentals for their arching form and feathery coloured flower clusters.

  • bajraktar (Albanian chieftain)

    Albania: The nature of Turkish rule: …highlands, to tribal chieftains called bajraktars, who presided over given territories with rigid patriarchal societies that were often torn by blood feuds. Peasants who were formerly serfs now worked on the estates of the beys as tenant farmers.

  • Bajus, Michael (Belgian theologian)

    Michael Baius was a theologian whose work powerfully influenced Cornelius Jansen, one of the fathers of Jansenism. Baius was educated at the Catholic University of Leuven (Louvain), where he studied philosophy and theology and held various university appointments. In about 1550, with the theologian

  • bak choi (plant)

    bok choy, (Brassica rapa), member of the mustard family (Brassicaceae) that is a variety (chinensis) of Brassica rapa. Bok choy belongs to a family of plants that includes other vegetables popular in Asian cookery such as mustard greens and Chinese leaves (also known as Chinese cabbage and Napa

  • Bak, Samuel (Israeli artist)

    Holocaust: Artistic responses to the Holocaust: Paintings and drawings by survivors Samuel Bak, Alice Lok Cahana, and David Olère document the horrors that they experienced in ghettos and death camps. Holocaust survivors also composed a wide variety of music, including street songs, which gave voice to life in the ghetto; resistance songs, such as Hirsh Glik’s…

  • baka (Japanese missile)

    kamikaze: …was given the nickname “Baka” by the Allies from the Japanese word for fool. The pilot had no means of getting out once the missile was fastened to the aircraft that would launch it. Dropped usually from an altitude of over 25,000 feet (7,500 metres) and more than 50…

  • Bakaas, Tamás (Hungarian archbishop)

    Tamás Bakócz was an archbishop who led a Crusade against the Ottoman Turks in 1514. Bakócz was born into a serf family, but he benefited from the fact that his older brother Bálint was provost of Titel. Bakócz was able to study in Krakow and at various Italian universities. Matthias I took notice

  • Bakác, Tamás (Hungarian archbishop)

    Tamás Bakócz was an archbishop who led a Crusade against the Ottoman Turks in 1514. Bakócz was born into a serf family, but he benefited from the fact that his older brother Bálint was provost of Titel. Bakócz was able to study in Krakow and at various Italian universities. Matthias I took notice

  • Bakahonde (people)

    Kaonde, a Bantu-speaking people the vast majority of whom inhabit the northwestern region of Zambia. A numerically much smaller group lives in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). The Zambian wooded highlands average 4,000 feet (1,220 metres) in elevation; to the southeast begin open plains

  • Bakan (Japan)

    Shimonoseki, city, southwestern Yamaguchi ken (prefecture), far western Honshu, Japan. It occupies a strategic position on the Kanmon (Shimonoseki) Strait between Honshu and Kyushu. Kitakyūshū lies opposite Shimonoseki across the strait. The city, the most populous in the prefecture, was formerly

  • Bakan, David (psychologist)

    mysticism: The goal of mysticism: In 1966 David Bakan, one of the founders of humanistic psychology, argued that Sigmund Freud’s practice of psychoanalysis—and, by extension, all of the psychotherapies derived from it—constitute a modern revival of rational mysticism. Bakan contended that free association is a type of meditation that is intended to…

  • bakanae (plant pathology)

    malformation: Exaggerated growth: …well illustrated in the so-called bakanae, or foolish seedling disease, of rice. The bakanae disease is caused by the fungus Gibberella fujikuroi. Diseased plants are often conspicuous in a field because of their extreme height and pale, spindly appearance. This exaggerated growth response was found to be due to specific…

  • Bakante bilder (work by Peretz)

    Yiddish literature: The classic writers: …an important slim volume called Bakante bilder (“Familiar Scenes”). These introspective works are remarkable for their extensive use of internal monologue before this technique had been widely explored in other European literatures. Der meshugener batlen (“The Mad Talmudist”) enters the mind of a yeshiva boy who reflects on his unstable…

  • Bakare, Ayinde (Nigerian musician)

    juju: …most notably Tunde King and Ayinde Bakare. King is credited not only with coining the term juju—in reference to the sound of a small, Brazilian tambourine-like drum that was used in his ensemble—but also with making the first recording of juju music in 1936. A year later Bakare went a…

  • Bakary, Djibo (Nigerien political leader)

    Niger: Colonial administration: …head, the left-wing trade unionist Djibo Bakary, advocated a no vote in the referendum of 1958, but 72 percent of the votes cast were in favour of a continued link with France. Nevertheless, under Bakary’s successor, his cousin and fellow Songhai-Zarma Hamani Diori, independence was proclaimed on August 3, 1960.

  • Bakassi Peninsula (peninsula, Africa)

    Cameroon: Consolidation and challenge: …with Nigeria over the oil-rich Bakassi Peninsula came to a head in late 1993 and early 1994 when Nigerian troops advanced into the region. New skirmishes occurred in early 1996, and, although a truce was signed, sporadic fighting continued for the next few years. After eight years of investigation and…

  • Bakáts, Tamás (Hungarian archbishop)

    Tamás Bakócz was an archbishop who led a Crusade against the Ottoman Turks in 1514. Bakócz was born into a serf family, but he benefited from the fact that his older brother Bálint was provost of Titel. Bakócz was able to study in Krakow and at various Italian universities. Matthias I took notice

  • Bakchai (play by Euripides)

    Bacchae, drama produced about 406 bce by Euripides. It is regarded by many as his masterpiece. In Bacchae the god Dionysus arrives in Greece from Asia intending to introduce his orgiastic worship there. He is disguised as a charismatic young Asian holy man and is accompanied by his women votaries,

  • Bakdash, Khalid (Syrian politician)

    Khalid Bakdash was a Syrian politician who acquired control of the Syrian Communist Party in 1932 and remained its most prominent spokesman until 1958, when he went into exile. As a young man Bakdash went to law school in Damascus but was expelled for illegal political activity. In 1930 he joined

  • Bakdāsh, Khālid (Syrian politician)

    Khalid Bakdash was a Syrian politician who acquired control of the Syrian Communist Party in 1932 and remained its most prominent spokesman until 1958, when he went into exile. As a young man Bakdash went to law school in Damascus but was expelled for illegal political activity. In 1930 he joined

  • bakeapple (plant)

    cloudberry, (Rubus chamaemorus), creeping herbaceous plant, native to the Arctic and subarctic regions of the north temperate zone, and its edible raspberry-like fruit. Inuit and Sami peoples collect the sweet juicy fruits in autumn to freeze for winter food. In markets of northern Scandinavia,

  • bakeberry (plant)

    cloudberry, (Rubus chamaemorus), creeping herbaceous plant, native to the Arctic and subarctic regions of the north temperate zone, and its edible raspberry-like fruit. Inuit and Sami peoples collect the sweet juicy fruits in autumn to freeze for winter food. In markets of northern Scandinavia,

  • baked Alaska (dessert)

    baked Alaska, dessert of American origin that consists of ice cream layered between a slice of sponge cake and a covering of meringue, which is baked quickly at high heat until lightly browned. Baked Alaska seems a physical improbability, given the tendency of ice cream to melt under heat. The

  • baked apple berry (plant)

    cloudberry, (Rubus chamaemorus), creeping herbaceous plant, native to the Arctic and subarctic regions of the north temperate zone, and its edible raspberry-like fruit. Inuit and Sami peoples collect the sweet juicy fruits in autumn to freeze for winter food. In markets of northern Scandinavia,

  • baked custard

    custard: Baked custard contains whole eggs, which cause the dish to solidify to a gel. Flan, or crème caramel, is a custard baked in a dish coated with caramelized sugar that forms a sauce when the custard is unmolded. For crème brûlée, the baked custard is…

  • Bakel (Senegal)

    Sénégal River: Physiography and hydrology: From Bakel to Dagana, a distance of 385 miles (620 km), the river flows through an alluvial valley as much as 12 miles (19 km) wide. Floods come in early September at Bakel, reaching Dagana by mid-October. During the flood season the water level rises 12…

  • Bakelite (chemical compound)

    Bakelite, trademarked synthetic resin invented in 1907 by Belgian-born American chemist Leo Hendrik Baekeland. A hard, infusible, and chemically resistant plastic, Bakelite was based on a chemical combination of phenol and formaldehyde (phenol-formaldehyde resin), two compounds that were derived

  • Bakema, Jacob B. (Dutch architect)

    Jacob B. Bakema was a Dutch architect who, in association with J.H. van den Broek, was particularly active in the reconstruction of Rotterdam after World War II. Bakema studied architecture and hydraulic engineering at Groningen, then studied advanced architecture at the Academy of Architecture,

  • Bakema, Jacob Berend (Dutch architect)

    Jacob B. Bakema was a Dutch architect who, in association with J.H. van den Broek, was particularly active in the reconstruction of Rotterdam after World War II. Bakema studied architecture and hydraulic engineering at Groningen, then studied advanced architecture at the Academy of Architecture,

  • Bakema, Jacob Berend (Dutch architect)

    Jacob B. Bakema was a Dutch architect who, in association with J.H. van den Broek, was particularly active in the reconstruction of Rotterdam after World War II. Bakema studied architecture and hydraulic engineering at Groningen, then studied advanced architecture at the Academy of Architecture,

  • Baker City (Oregon, United States)

    Baker City, city, seat (1868) of Baker county, northeastern Oregon, U.S. It is situated along the Powder River, in Baker Valley, between the Blue Mountains (west) and the Wallowa Mountains (east). Lying on the old Oregon Trail and settled during the Oregon gold rush (1861–62), it was laid out in

  • Baker Island (island and territory, United States)

    Baker Island, unincorporated territory of the United States in the South Pacific Ocean, about 1,650 miles (2,650 km) southwest of Honolulu. A coral atoll rising to 25 feet (8 metres), it measures 1 mile (1.6 km) long by 0.7 mile (1.1 km) wide and has a land area of about 0.6 square mile (1.5 square

  • Baker Lake (lake, Nunavut, Canada)
  • Baker tent

    tent: …slope of the pyramid; the Baker tent, which is a rectangular fabric lean-to with an open front protected by a projecting horizontal flap; the umbrella tent, which was originally made with internal supporting arms like an umbrella but which later became widely popular with external framing of hollow aluminum; and…

  • Baker v. Carr (law case)

    Baker v. Carr, (1962), U.S. Supreme Court case that forced the Tennessee legislature to reapportion itself on the basis of population. Traditionally, particularly in the South, the populations of rural areas had been overrepresented in legislatures in proportion to those of urban and suburban

  • Baker v. Owen (law case)

    Baker v. Owen, legal case in which the U.S. Supreme Court on October 20, 1975, summarily (without written briefs or oral argument) affirmed a ruling of a U.S. district court that had sustained the right of school officials to administer corporal punishment to students over the objection of their

  • Baker’s Biographical Dictionary of Musicians (work by Baker)

    Theodore Baker: …of Musical Terms (1895) and Baker’s Biographical Dictionary of Musicians (1900), the work for which he is best known. This last volume included the names of many musicians never previously mentioned in musical reference works. A second edition was published in 1905, and the dictionary underwent several revisions, the 8th…

  • baker’s cap (headwear)

    toque: The typical white baker’s cap, traditionally worn by chefs, is a form of toque.

  • baker’s yeast (baking)

    baking: Yeast: …rye bread, are leavened with bakers’ yeast, composed of living cells of the yeast strain Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A typical yeast addition level might be 2 percent of the dough weight. Bakeries receive yeast in the form of compressed cakes containing about 70 percent water or as dry granules containing about…

  • Baker, Alan (British mathematician)

    Alan Baker was a British mathematician who was awarded the Fields Medal in 1970 for his work in number theory. Baker attended University College, London (B.S., 1961), and Trinity College, Cambridge (M.A. and Ph.D., 1964). He held an appointment at University College (1964–65) and then joined the

  • Baker, Anita (American singer)

    Anita Baker is an American singer whose three-octave range and powerful, emotional delivery brought her international acclaim in the 1980s and ’90s. She was one of the most popular artists in urban contemporary music, a genre that her sophisticated, tradition-oriented soul and rhythm-and-blues

  • Baker, Annie (American playwright)

    Annie Baker is an American playwright, best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning play, The Flick (2013). In 2023 The Guardian described her work as “disquietingly moving ensemble pieces populated by characters who live in ordinary pockets of New England and speak in dialogue that feels wholly

  • Baker, Augusta Braxton (American librarian and storyteller)

    Augusta Braxton Baker was an American librarian and storyteller who worked long and prolifically in the field of children’s literature. Her many accomplishments included the first extensive bibliography of children’s books portraying positive African-American role models. Braxton was the only child

  • Baker, Augustine (English monk)

    Augustine Baker was an English Benedictine monk who was an important writer on ascetic and mystical theology. Educated at Broadgate’s Hall (now Pembroke College), Oxford, Baker was a Roman Catholic convert who evolved an ascetical doctrine based on his reading and personal experiences. His doctrine

  • Baker, Carlos (American literary critic)

    Carlos Baker was an American teacher, novelist, and critic known for his definitive biographies of Ernest Hemingway and Percy Bysshe Shelley. Baker received a Ph.D. from Princeton University (1940) and became professor of English there in 1951. His book Shelley’s Major Poetry: The Fabric of a

  • Baker, Carlos Heard (American literary critic)

    Carlos Baker was an American teacher, novelist, and critic known for his definitive biographies of Ernest Hemingway and Percy Bysshe Shelley. Baker received a Ph.D. from Princeton University (1940) and became professor of English there in 1951. His book Shelley’s Major Poetry: The Fabric of a

  • Baker, Chesney Henry (American musician and vocalist)

    Chet Baker was an American jazz trumpeter and vocalist noted for the plaintive, fragile tone of both his playing and singing. He was a cult figure whose well-publicized struggles with drug addiction curtailed a promising career. Born in Oklahoma and reared in California from age 10, Baker began

  • Baker, Chet (American musician and vocalist)

    Chet Baker was an American jazz trumpeter and vocalist noted for the plaintive, fragile tone of both his playing and singing. He was a cult figure whose well-publicized struggles with drug addiction curtailed a promising career. Born in Oklahoma and reared in California from age 10, Baker began

  • Baker, Constance (American lawyer and jurist)

    Constance Baker Motley was an American lawyer and jurist, an effective legal advocate in the civil rights movement and the first African American woman to become a federal judge (1966–2005). Constance Baker’s father was a chef for Skull and Bones, an exclusive social club at Yale University in New

  • Baker, Dame Janet Abbott (English opera singer)

    Janet Baker is an English operatic mezzo-soprano who was known for her vocal expression, stage presence, and effective diction. As a recitalist, she was noted for her interpretations of the works of Gustav Mahler, Edward Elgar, and Johann Sebastian Bach. Baker studied voice in London until 1956,

  • Baker, David (American biochemist and computational biologist)

    David Baker is an American biochemist and computational biologist who developed computerized methods for the de novo (from scratch) design of proteins with entirely new functions. Baker’s work on protein structure prediction and design fueled advances in synthetic biology and in the development of

  • Baker, Diane (American actress)

    Journey to the Center of the Earth: Cast:

  • Baker, Dusty (American baseball player)

    Who Invented the High Five?: The Baker-Burke story: …Los Angeles Dodgers left fielder Dusty Baker slapped teammate Glenn Burke’s upraised palm after Baker’s 30th home run of the season on October 2, 1977. The home run made the Dodgers the first Major League Baseball team to have four players hit 30 home runs each in a single season.…

  • Baker, Ella (American activist)

    Ella Baker was an American community organizer and political activist who brought her skills and principles to bear in the founding of major civil rights organizations of the mid-20th century. She is widely recognized as one of the key leaders of the American civil rights movement. Baker was reared

  • Baker, Etta (American musician)

    Etta Baker was an American folk musician who influenced the folk music revival of the 1950s and ’60s with her mastery of East Coast Piedmont blues, a unique fingerpicking style of guitar-playing that is common to the Appalachian Mountains, especially areas of Georgia, the Carolinas, and Virginia.

  • Baker, Florence (British explorer)

    John Hanning Speke: …Nile explorers Samuel Baker and Florence von Sass (who later became Baker’s wife). Speke and Grant told them of another lake said to lie west of Lake Victoria. This information helped the Baker party to locate another Nile source, Lake Albert.

  • Baker, Gene (American sports manager)

    baseball: Integration: In 1961 Gene Baker became the first African American to manage a minor league team, and in the mid-1960s there were only two African American coaches in the major leagues. In 1975 the Cleveland Indians made Frank Robinson the first Black field manager in major league history.…

  • Baker, George (American religious leader)

    Father Divine was a prominent African American religious leader of the 1930s. The Depression-era movement he founded, the Peace Mission, was originally dismissed as a cult, but it still exists and is now generally hailed as an important precursor of the civil rights movement. Reportedly born on a

  • Baker, George Fisher (American financier)

    George Fisher Baker was an American financier, bank president, and philanthropist who endowed the Graduate School of Business Administration at Harvard. When the national banking system was created in 1863, Baker joined with several New York stockbrokers to establish the First National Bank of New

  • Baker, George Pierce (American drama teacher)

    George Pierce Baker was an American teacher of some of the most notable American dramatists, among them Eugene O’Neill, Philip Barry, Sidney Howard, and S.N. Behrman. Emphasizing creative individuality and practical construction (he guided students’ plays through workshop performances), Baker

  • Baker, Ginger (British musician)

    Ginger Baker was an English drummer and percussionist known for his flamboyant playing style that incorporated intricate polyrhythms influenced by jazz, rock, and West African music. Baker was widely considered rock’s first superstar drummer, serving as the drummer for the seminal British rock

  • Baker, Henry (English naturalist)

    Noctiluca: English naturalist Henry Baker, in 1753, provided a scientific description of Noctiluca, which is a large (about 1–2 mm [0.04–0.08 inch] in diameter), spherical, gelatinous single-celled organism enveloped in a thin pellicle (outer covering). The cell contains a centrally located nucleus. Embedded within the cell cytoplasm are…

  • Baker, Herbert (British architect)

    Rashtrapati Bhavan: History: …and his primary collaborator was Herbert Baker. Lutyens designed the main palace, and Baker designed the two structures that make up the Secretariat buildings, called North Block and South Block, which frame Rashtrapati Bhavan when seen from Rajpath. The space between these two buildings became a contentious topic between Lutyens…

  • Baker, Houston A., Jr. (American educator and critic)

    Houston A. Baker, Jr. is an American educator and critic who proposed new standards, based on African American culture and values, for the interpretation and evaluation of literature. Baker attended Howard University (B.A, 1965), the University of Edinburgh, and the University of California at Los

  • Baker, Houston Alfred, Jr. (American educator and critic)

    Houston A. Baker, Jr. is an American educator and critic who proposed new standards, based on African American culture and values, for the interpretation and evaluation of literature. Baker attended Howard University (B.A, 1965), the University of Edinburgh, and the University of California at Los

  • Baker, James (American statesman)

    James Baker is an American government official, political manager, and lawyer who occupied important posts in the Republican presidential administrations of the 1980s and early ’90s, including that of U.S. secretary of state (1989–92). (Read James Baker’s Britannica essay on isolationism.) The son

  • Baker, James Addison, III (American statesman)

    James Baker is an American government official, political manager, and lawyer who occupied important posts in the Republican presidential administrations of the 1980s and early ’90s, including that of U.S. secretary of state (1989–92). (Read James Baker’s Britannica essay on isolationism.) The son

  • Baker, Janet (English opera singer)

    Janet Baker is an English operatic mezzo-soprano who was known for her vocal expression, stage presence, and effective diction. As a recitalist, she was noted for her interpretations of the works of Gustav Mahler, Edward Elgar, and Johann Sebastian Bach. Baker studied voice in London until 1956,

  • Baker, Joe Don (American actor)

    Phil Karlson: Later films: …sheriff Buford Pusser (played by Joe Don Baker) to clean up his corrupt Tennessee town using any means necessary. Karlson reteamed with Baker on Framed (1975), in which a gambler seeks revenge against the crooked cops who sent him to prison on a trumped-up charge. It was Karlson’s last film,…

  • Baker, Josephine (French entertainer)

    Josephine Baker was an American-born French dancer and singer who symbolized the beauty and vitality of Black American culture, which took Paris by storm in the 1920s. Baker grew up fatherless and in poverty. Between the ages of 8 and 10 she was out of school, helping to support her family. As a

  • Baker, LaFayette Curry (United States general)

    LaFayette Curry Baker was the chief of the U.S. Federal Detective Police during the American Civil War and director of Union intelligence and counterintelligence operations. In 1848 Baker left his home in Michigan, where the family had moved when he was a child, and worked at a variety of

  • Baker, LaVern (American singer)

    LaVern Baker was an American rhythm-and-blues singer notable for her vocal power and rhythmic energy. At age 17 she performed as Little Miss Sharecropper. Her 1955–65 tenure with Atlantic Records yielded 15 rhythm-and-blues hits, most notably “Tweedle Dee” (1955), “Jim Dandy” (1957), and “I Cried a

  • Baker, Lorenzo Dow (British entrepreneur)

    Jamaica: The crown colony: …the 19th century, when Captain Lorenzo Dow Baker, founder of the organization that later became the United Fruit Company, started a lucrative banana trade in Jamaica. Bananas soon became a principal export crop for small farmers as well as for large estates.

  • Baker, Louisa (American historical figure)

    Lucy Brewer was a self-professed first woman U.S. Marine, whose claim is colourful but generally agreed to be unfounded. According to legend, Lucy Brewer, originally a farm girl from Massachusetts, disguised herself as a man and served as a member of the USS Constitution Marine guard during the War

  • Baker, Mary (American religious leader)

    Mary Baker Eddy was a Christian religious reformer and founder of the religious denomination known as Christian Science. Mary Baker Eddy’s family background and life until her “discovery” of Christian Science in 1866 greatly influenced her interest in religious reform. She was born to devout

  • Baker, Michael (American engineer)

    bridge: Truss bridges: Designed by Michael Baker, the two-hinged arch truss carries four lanes of traffic 263 metres (876 feet) above the river and has a span of 510 metres (1,700 feet).