- Battle of Tetuan (painting by Fortuny)
Mariano Fortuny: , the huge “Battle of Tetuan,” based on an incident in the Moroccan campaign and a fine example of pictorial reportage, charged with action and energy. More characteristic, however, are his small genre paintings filled with fine detail, works that attempted to recapture the grace and charm of…
- Battle of the Books (work by Swift)
Jonathan Swift: Years at Moor Park: …and learning”; the mock-heroic “Battle of the Books”; and the “Discourse Concerning the Mechanical Operation of the Spirit,” which ridiculed the manner of worship and preaching of religious enthusiasts at that period. In the “Battle of the Books,” Swift supports the ancients in the longstanding dispute about the relative…
- Battle of the Bulge (film by Annakin [1965])
Robert Shaw: …as a German officer in Battle of the Bulge (1965). Shaw’s performance as King Henry VIII in Fred Zinnemann’s A Man for All Seasons (1966) earned him an Academy Award nomination. He later appeared in The Birthday Party (1968), another Pinter adaptation.
- Battle of the Centaurs (work by Michelangelo)
Michelangelo: Early life and works: This composition is the Battle of the Centaurs (c. 1492). The action and power of the figures foretell the artist’s later interests much more than does the Madonna of the Stairs (c. 1491), a delicate low relief that reflects recent fashions among such Florentine sculptors as Desiderio da Settignano.
- Battle of the Nudes, The (print by Pollaiuolo)
printmaking: Italy: …on his one authenticated print, The Battle of the Nudes (c. 1470)—a powerful image, beautifully engraved in the broad manner.
- Battle of the Sexes (film by Dayton and Faris [2017])
Steve Carell: Battle of the Sexes and Vice: In Battle of the Sexes (2017), Carell costarred with Emma Stone portraying Bobby Riggs and Billie Jean King, respectively, during their much-publicized tennis match of 1973. That year he also played a Vietnam War veteran who asks his old war buddies to help him bury his…
- Battle of the Sexes (tennis event [1973])
Battle of the Sexes, exhibition tennis match between Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs that took place on September 20, 1973, inside the Astrodome in Houston. The match was something of a spectacle as the in-her-prime King defeated the 55-year-old Riggs in three straight sets, but the event
- Battle of the Villa Fiorita, The (film by Daves [1965])
Delmer Daves: Later films: …Daves made his last picture, The Battle of the Villa Fiorita (1965), a soap opera in which an Italian pianist (Rossano Brazzi) romances an unhappily married English woman (O’Hara).
- Battle of Theseus and the Amazons (painting by Micon)
Micon: …Stoa Poikile, Micon executed the “Amazonomachy,” or the “Battle of Theseus and the Amazons,” placed to the right of Polygnotus’ work. This work apparently marked an important advance in the rendering of space, perspective, and distance by means of the placement of figures within a composition. The painting procured Micon…
- Battle on the Ice (Russian history)
Lake Peipus: …“Battle on the Ice” (Ledovoye Poboishche). His victory (April 5) forced the grand master of the Knights to relinquish all claims to the Russian lands that he had conquered and substantially reduced the Teutonic threat to northwestern Russia.
- Battle on the Ice, The (work by Prokofiev)
Alexander Nevsky: …movement of Prokofiev’s score, “The Battle on the Ice,” accompanies the film’s pivotal scene in which the mounted forces of both armies meet on a frozen lake. The movement opens with quiet tension, then bursts into frenetic action when the battle begins. Harsh tones and clashing rhythmic patterns evoke…
- Battle River (river, Canada)
Battle River, river in central Alberta and Saskatchewan, Canada, that is the largest tributary of the North Saskatchewan River. Rising in the Battle and Pigeon lakes 40 miles (65 km) southwest of Edmonton, Alta., it flows eastward through a farming and oil-producing area for more than 350 miles
- battle royal
cockfighting: …particular ire of moralists, however—the battle royal, in which a number of birds were “set” (i.e., placed in the pit at the same time) and allowed to remain until all but one, the victor, were killed or disabled, and the Welsh main, in which eight pairs were matched, the eight…
- Battle Royale (film by Fukasaku)
Kitano Takeshi: …appeared in Batoru rowaiaru (Battle Royale), a futuristic thriller that stirred controversy in Japan with its tale of juvenile delinquents forced by authorities into deadly combat on a remote island. He later starred in its sequel, Batoru rowaiaru II: Chinkonka (2003; Battle Royale II: Requiem). Kitano abandoned his preoccupations…
- Battle Symphony (work by Beethoven)
Ludwig van Beethoven: Wider recognition: …same concert was the so-called Battle Symphony, written to celebrate the decisive victory of Arthur Wellesley (later duke of Wellington) over Joseph Bonaparte at Vitoria. Composed originally for a mechanical musical instrument, the Panharmonicon, invented by J.N. Maelzel, Beethoven later scored the work for orchestra. He frankly admitted it was…
- Battle Weight + Smell (poem by Marinetti)
Futurism: Literature: …peso + odore” (1912; “Battle Weight + Smell”) was appended to one of the Futurists’ manifestos as an example of words-in-freedom:
- Battle, Kathleen (American opera singer)
Kathleen Battle is an American opera singer, among the finest coloratura sopranos of her time. As a child and young adult Battle was both a good student and a good singer. She was awarded a scholarship to the University of Cincinnati College–Conservatory of Music in Ohio, where she earned
- Battle, Kathleen Deanne (American opera singer)
Kathleen Battle is an American opera singer, among the finest coloratura sopranos of her time. As a child and young adult Battle was both a good student and a good singer. She was awarded a scholarship to the University of Cincinnati College–Conservatory of Music in Ohio, where she earned
- battle, line of (military)
ship of the line: …a fighting formation called the line of battle, in which two opposing columns of ships maneuvered to fire their guns in broadside (a simultaneous discharge of all the guns arrayed on one side of a ship) against each other. Combat using these formations was known as line-of-battle warfare. Such battles…
- Battle, Robert (American dancer and choreographer)
Robert Battle is an American dancer and choreographer who was the artistic director (2011– ) of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater. Battle, who was raised by his great-uncle and his cousin, studied dance under Daniel Lewis and Gerri Houlihan at the New World School of the Arts, a respected arts
- battle, trial by (trial process)
ordeal: In ordeal by combat, or ritual combat, the victor is said to win not by his own strength but because supernatural powers have intervened on the side of the right, as in the duel in the European Middle Ages in which the “judgment of God” was…
- Battle-Ax (people)
history of Transcaucasia: …weapon was the shaft-hole copper battle-ax, of a type also found in central and northern Europe. There is evidence that the distribution of this weapon resulted from a migration of horse-riding folk, the so-called Battle-Ax people, who spread Indo-European speech. Their place of origin is not certain, but it was…
- Battle-Cry of Freedom, The (song by Root)
Remembering the American Civil War: George Frederick Root: The Battle-Cry of Freedom; and Harry McCarty: The Bonnie Blue Flag: Every war manifests its spirit in songs. One of the most popular songs of the North was “The Battle-Cry of Freedom,” composed by George Frederick Root, a professional songwriter. The song was written a…
- battledore and shuttlecock (game)
battledore and shuttlecock, children’s game played by two persons using small rackets called battledores, which are made of parchment, plastic, or rows of gut or nylon stretched across wooden frames, and shuttlecocks, made of a base of some light material, such as cork, with trimmed feathers fixed
- battlefield medicine
battlefield medicine, field of medicine concerned with the prompt treatment of wounded military personnel within the vicinity of a war zone. Studies of historical casualty rates have shown that about half of military personnel killed in action died from the loss of blood and that up to 80 percent
- Battlefield of the Mind (work by Meyer)
Joyce Meyer: Ministry and growth: …of a positive mindset, including Battlefield of the Mind (1995), The Confident Woman (2006), Power Thoughts (2009), and Living Beyond Your Feelings (2011). She has written several devotionals, such as Hearing from God Each Morning (2004) and Trusting God Day by Day (2012), as well as many books aimed at…
- battlefield support weapon
tactical weapons system: Surface-to-surface systems: Battlefield support weapons include such ballistic missiles as the U.S. Lance and the French Pluton, which have ranges of about 75 miles (120 km). These systems, which can deliver nuclear warheads, incorporate vehicles to launch the missiles and to house command and fire-control computers and…
- Battleground (film by Wellman [1949])
William Wellman: Films of the 1940s: …under its aegis, not least Battleground (1949), an account of the Battle of the Bulge during World War II that was a major box-office hit. The film brought Wellman an Academy Award nomination for best director.
- battlement (architecture)
battlement, the parapet of a wall consisting of alternating low portions known as crenels, or crenelles (hence crenellated walls with battlements), and high portions called merlons. Battlements were devised in order that warriors might be protected by the merlons and yet be able to discharge arrows
- Battlers, The (novel by Tennant)
Kylie Tennant: In preparation for The Battlers (1941), about migrant workers, Tennant traveled for months with the unemployed along the roads of Australia, and several years later she lived in a fishing village for a while and worked as a boat builder before publishing Lost Haven (1946), a story of wartime…
- Battles of Coxinga, The (work by Chikamatsu)
Chikamatsu Monzaemon: …work was Kokusenya kassen (1715; The Battles of Coxinga), a historical melodrama based loosely on events in the life of the Chinese-Japanese adventurer who attempted to restore the Ming dynasty in China. Another celebrated work is Shinjū ten no Amijima (1720; Double Suicide at Amijima), still frequently performed. Despite Chikamatsu’s…
- battleship (naval ship)
battleship, capital ship of the world’s navies from about 1860, when it began to supplant the wooden-hulled, sail-driven ship of the line, to World War II, when its preeminent position was taken over by the aircraft carrier. Battleships combined large size, powerful guns, heavy armour, and
- Battleship (film by Berg [2012])
Rami Malek: Early career: …include the sci-fi action drama Battleship and Paul Thomas Anderson’s acclaimed The Master; the latter centers on a WWII veteran (Joaquin Phoenix) and a charismatic guru (Philip Seymour Hoffman). Malek also had supporting roles in two Spike Lee films: Oldboy (2013), a revenge drama about a man kidnapped and
- Battleship Island (island, Nagasaki prefecture, Kyushu, Japan)
Ha Island, abandoned coal-mining centre some 3 miles (5 km) offshore, Nagasaki prefecture, northwestern Kyushu, Japan. The island, nicknamed Battleship Island (Gunkan-jima) because its silhouette resembles a battleship, was bought and developed by the Mitsubishi Mining Company in 1890. It closed in
- Battleship Potemkin (film by Eisenstein [1925])
Battleship Potemkin, Soviet silent film, released in 1925, that was director Sergey M. Eisenstein’s tribute to the early Russian revolutionaries and is widely regarded as a masterpiece of international cinema. The film is based on the mutiny of Russian sailors against their tyrannical superiors
- Battlestar Galactica (television series)
Richard Hatch: …the science fiction television series Battlestar Galactica (1978–79) and later played the terrorist-turned-politician Tom Zarek in the 2004–09 reprise of the series.
- Battletech (computer game)
virtual reality: Entertainment: …World Entertainment opened the first BattleTech emporium in Chicago. Modeled loosely on the U.S. military’s SIMNET system of networked training simulators, BattleTech centres put players in individual “pods,” essentially cockpits that served as immersive, interactive consoles for both narrative and competitive game experiences. All the vehicles represented in the game…
- Battling Bellhop, The (film by Curtiz [1937])
Michael Curtiz: The breakthrough years: …film of the year was Kid Galahad (also released as The Battling Bellhop), a boxing film with Edward G. Robinson in the role of a promoter and Wayne Morris as a prizefighter.
- Battling Malone, and Other Stories (novel by Hémon)
Louis Hémon: Battling Malone, and Other Stories), and Monsieur Ripois et la Némésis (1925; Monsieur Ripois and Nemesis). In 1980 Nicole Deschamps published a new edition of Maria Chapdelaine based on Hémon’s original manuscript.
- Battling Malone, pugiliste (novel by Hémon)
Louis Hémon: Battling Malone, and Other Stories), and Monsieur Ripois et la Némésis (1925; Monsieur Ripois and Nemesis). In 1980 Nicole Deschamps published a new edition of Maria Chapdelaine based on Hémon’s original manuscript.
- Battling Siki (African boxer)
boxing: Africa: …win a world championship was Louis Phal (better known as “Battling Siki”) of Senegal, who knocked out Georges Carpentier in Paris in 1922 to capture the world light-heavyweight crown. Six months later Siki lost his title on a controversial decision to Mike McTigue, an Irishman, in Dublin on St. Patrick’s…
- Battoni, Pompeo Girolamo (Italian painter)
Pompeo Girolamo Batoni was an Italian painter, who in his own time was ranked with Anton Raphael Mengs as a painter of historical subjects. Probably his portraits are now better known, as he invented the type of “grand tourist” portrait, very popular among the English, which shows the sitter at his
- battu (ballet)
assemblé: …the floor and executing small, battu (“beaten”) steps.
- Battulga, Khaltmaa (president of Mongolia)
Mongolia: Political developments: …June 26, 2017, presidential election: Khaltmaa Battulga, representing the DP; MPP head Enkhbold, whose party had dominated legislative elections the year prior; and Sainkhuu Ganbaatar of the new MPRP. All three men had allegations of corruption clouding their candidacy, which dominated campaign discussions and left many voters unenthused about the…
- Battus I (king of Cyrene)
Cyrene: Their leader, Battus, became the first king, founding the dynasty of the Battiads, whose members, named alternately Battus and Arcesilaus, ruled Cyrene for eight generations (until c. 440 bce). Under their rule, the city prospered economically and expanded, establishing its port of Apollonia (Marsa Sūsah) and the…
- Battus philenor (butterfly)
Lepidoptera: Protection against danger: …it coexists with the distasteful pipevine swallowtail (Battus philenor), which is also black. However, where B. philenor does not occur, P. glaucus females tend to be all nonmimetic yellow forms like the males because, without the black models, black has no protective significance. Some very striking mimetic polymorphisms occur among…
- Batu (Mongol ruler)
Batu was the grandson of Genghis Khan and founder of the Khanate of Kipchak, or the Golden Horde. In 1235 Batu was elected commander in chief of the western part of the Mongol empire and was given responsibility for the invasion of Europe. By 1240 he had conquered all of Russia. In the campaign in
- Batu (Uzbek poet)
Uzbekistan: Cultural life: The younger poets Batu, Cholpán (Abdulhamid Sulayman Yunús), and Elbek (Mashriq Yunus Oghli) offered metres and rhyme schemes quite different from the verse composed in the traditions long employed by the poets of the region. Fitrat gained fame and popularity for such prose and poetic dialogues as Munazara…
- Batu Caves (caves, Malaysia)
Batu Caves, complex of limestone grottoes in Peninsular Malaysia. The caves are one of the country’s biggest tourist attractions and are a place of pilgrimage for Tamil Hindus. They are named for the Sungai Batu (Batu River), which flows nearby, and are located 7 miles (13 km) north of Kuala
- Batu Islands (islands, Indonesia)
Batu Islands, group of three major islands and 48 islets off the west coast of Sumatra, Indonesia. Administratively, they are part of North Sumatra (Sumatera Utara) propinsi (province). The three largest islands are Pini, Tanahmasa, and Tanahbala; the total area is 6,370 square miles (16,500 square
- Batu Pahat (Malaysia)
Batu Pahat, port, Peninsular (West) Malaysia (Malaya), on the Strait of Malacca at the mouth of the Batu Pahat River. It is a fishing town and a distribution centre; and, until the completion of a bridge in 1968, it was a ferry point for road traffic across the river. Sago palms, rubber, coconuts,
- Batu Tjina (island, Indonesia)
Halmahera, largest island of the Moluccas, in Indonesia; administratively, it is part of the propinsi (or provinsi; province) of North Maluku (Maluku Utara). The island, located between the Molucca Sea (west) and the Pacific Ocean (east), consists of four peninsulas enclosing three great bays
- Batu, Kepulauan (islands, Indonesia)
Batu Islands, group of three major islands and 48 islets off the west coast of Sumatra, Indonesia. Administratively, they are part of North Sumatra (Sumatera Utara) propinsi (province). The three largest islands are Pini, Tanahmasa, and Tanahbala; the total area is 6,370 square miles (16,500 square
- Batu, Mount (mountain, Ethiopia)
Ethiopia: Relief of Ethiopia: …14,360 feet (4,377 metres), and Mount Batu, at 14,127 feet (4,305 metres). The Eastern Lowlands resemble the long train of a bridal gown suddenly dipping from the narrow band of the Eastern Highlands and gently rolling for hundreds of miles to the Somalian border. Two important regions here are the…
- batuko (Cabo Verdean music form)
Cabo Verde: The arts: …reborn in Cabo Verde as batuko (derived from the Portuguese verb meaning “to beat”), a genre that features polyrhythm and call and response performed by a group of women. European traditions are revealed in the morna, a lament comparable to the Portuguese fado, and the mazurka. Other styles include the…
- Batum, Treaty of (Armenia [1918])
Armenia: The republic of Armenia: …was forced to sign the Treaty of Batum with the Ottoman state, acknowledging the pre-1878 Russo-Turkish frontier along the Arpa and Aras rivers as its boundary, but after the Allied victory in World War I the Armenians reoccupied Alexandropol (now Gyumri) and Kars. A short war ensued with Georgia for…
- Batumi (Georgia)
Batumi, city and capital of Ajaria (Adzhariya), southwestern Georgia, on a gulf of the Black Sea about 9.5 miles (15 km) north of the Turkish frontier. The city’s name comes from the location of its first settlement, on the left bank of the Bat River. With a history dating from the 1st millennium
- batuque (dance)
samba: Sometimes called batuque, it is a kind of group dance, done either in circles with a soloist or in double lines.
- Batusi (people)
Tutsi, ethnic group of probable Nilotic origin, whose members live within Rwanda and Burundi. The Tutsi formed the traditional aristocratic minority in both countries, constituting about 9 percent and 14 percent of the population, respectively. The Tutsis’ numbers in Rwanda were greatly reduced by
- Batwa (people)
Twa, one of the best-known of the many Pygmy groups scattered across equatorial Africa. Like all other African Pygmies, the Twa, averaging about 5 feet (1.5 m) in height, are a people of mixed ancestry, probably descendants of the original inhabitants of the equatorial rainforest. They live in the
- Batwoman (fictional character)
Batwoman, American comic strip superhero created for DC Comics to serve as a strong female counterpart to Batman. The original Batwoman, Kathy Kane, made her debut in Detective Comics no. 233 (July 1956). She was to serve as a female romantic interest for Batman, thereby countering the charge made
- Baty, Gaston (French playwright and producer)
Gaston Baty was a French playwright and producer who exerted a notable influence on world theatre during the 1920s and ’30s. Baty was influenced by both German and Russian theatre, particularly the work of Munich designer Fritz Erler, and favoured a nonnaturalistic approach to staging to abolish
- Baty, Jean-Baptiste-Marie-Gaston (French playwright and producer)
Gaston Baty was a French playwright and producer who exerted a notable influence on world theatre during the 1920s and ’30s. Baty was influenced by both German and Russian theatre, particularly the work of Munich designer Fritz Erler, and favoured a nonnaturalistic approach to staging to abolish
- batyr (Mongol title)
Kazakhstan: Kazakhstan to c. 1700 ce: …more by the beys and batyrs (the heads of the clans that were the components of each tribe). Nominally, the khans commanded a formidable force of mounted warriors, but, in reality, they depended on the loyalty of the beys and batyrs. The last son of Kasym Khan to rule the…
- Batyr Depression (physical feature, Kazakhstan)
Mangghystaū: …flatlands, with some depressions (the Batyr Depression is 425 feet [130 m] below sea level). It is rich in petroleum and natural gas, especially in the oil and gas region of the Mangghystaū Peninsula. The peninsula also contains deposits of phosphorites and coquina. The desert climate is continental and extremely…
- Batyushkov, Konstantin Nikolayevich (Russian poet)
Konstantin Nikolayevich Batyushkov was a Russian elegiac poet whose sensual and melodious verses were said to have influenced the great Russian poet Aleksandr Pushkin. Batyushkov’s early childhood was spent in the country on his father’s estate. When he was 10 he went to Moscow, where he studied
- Batyyeva Hill (hill, Kyiv, Ukraine)
Kyiv: City site: …line of bluffs culminating in Batyyeva Hill, 330 feet (100 metres) above mean river level. This precipitous and wooded bank, topped by the golden domes and spires of churches and bell towers and by high-rise apartment buildings, makes the city an attractive and impressive sight from across the Dnieper. Since…
- Batz, Jean, baron de (French conspirator)
Jean, baron de Batz was a royalist conspirator during the French Revolution. Born of a noble family in Gascony, Batz entered the army at the age of 14, rising to the rank of colonel by 1787. During Louis XVI’s reign he busied himself with financial transactions and made a fortune. He was sent to
- Bau (Mesopotamian deity)
Bau, in Mesopotamian religion, city goddess of Urukug in the Lagash region of Sumer and, under the name Nininsina, the Queen of Isin, city goddess of Isin, south of Nippur. In Nippur she was called Ninnibru, Queen of Nippur. Bau seems originally to have been goddess of the dog; as Nininsina she was
- Bau (island, Fiji)
Fiji: History of Fiji: …rise of the kingdom of Bau, a tiny island off the east coast of Viti Levu, ruled first by Naulivou and then by his nephew Cakobau. By the 1850s Bau dominated western Fiji. Cakobau’s main rival was the Tongan chief Maʿafu, who led an army of Christian Tongans and their…
- Bauan Fijian (language)
Fijian language: …Eastern dialect (Bauan) and called Bauan Fijian, is known to all indigenous Fijians. Literacy in modern Fiji is high, and Fijian is widely used as a written language and for broadcasting.
- Bauchau, Henry (Belgian author)
Henry Bauchau was a Belgian novelist, poet, and playwright who was also a practicing psychoanalyst. Like his contemporary Dominique Rolin but unusually for a Belgian writer, Bauchau took his inspiration from psychoanalysis. Bauchau studied law and began writing for periodicals. After World War II
- Bauchi (state, Nigeria)
Bauchi, state, northeastern Nigeria. Before 1976 it was a province in former North-Eastern state. Bauchi is bounded by the states of Jigawa and Kano on the northwest; Kaduna on the west; Plateau, Taraba, and Gombe on the south; and Yobe on the east. The highlands in the southwestern part of the
- Bauchi (Nigeria)
Bauchi, town, capital of Bauchi state and traditional emirate, northeastern Nigeria. Bauchi town lies on the railroad from Maiduguri to Kafanchan (where it joins the line to Port Harcourt) and has road connections to Jos, Kano, and Maiduguri. The emirate was founded (1800–10) by Yakubu, one of
- Bauchi Plateau (plateau, Nigeria)
Jos Plateau, tableland in Plateau State, central Nigeria, distinguished by its high bounding scarp and by bare grassland and embracing Africa’s chief tin-mining region. Its central area covers about 3,000 square miles (8,000 square km) and has an average elevation of 4,200 feet (1,280 meters); the
- Baucus, Max (American politician)
United States: Negotiating health care reform: Max Baucus. The bill that was ultimately passed in the Senate called for considerably less change than the House bill (most notably excluding the “public option” through which a government-run program would have provided lower-cost competition for private insurance companies). It just barely survived a…
- baud (communications)
modem: Operating parameters: …phases) is known as a baud. In early voiceband modems beginning in the early 1960s, one baud represented one bit, so that a modem operating, for instance, at 300 bauds per second (or, more simply, 300 baud) transmitted data at 300 bits per second. In modern modems a baud can…
- Bauddhadhikkara (work by Udayanacharya)
Udayanacharya: …in the Kusumanjali and the Bauddhadhikkara, the latter an attack on the nontheistic thesis of Buddhism. Living in a period of lively controversy with the Buddhists, Udayanacharya defended his belief in a personal God by resorting to the two natures of the world: cause and effect. The presence of the…
- Baudelaire (work by Duchamp-Villon)
Western sculpture: Avant-garde sculpture (1909–20): …Rodin, but his portrait head Baudelaire (1911) contrasts with that by his predecessor in its more radical departure from the flesh; the somewhat squared-off head is molded by clear, hard volumes. His famous Horse (1914), a coiled, vaguely mechanical form bearing little resemblance to the animal itself, suggests metaphorically the…
- Baudelaire, Charles (French author)
Charles Baudelaire was a French poet, translator, and literary and art critic whose reputation rests primarily on Les Fleurs du mal (1857; The Flowers of Evil), which was perhaps the most important and influential poetry collection published in Europe in the 19th century. Similarly, his Petits
- Baudelaire, Charles-Pierre (French author)
Charles Baudelaire was a French poet, translator, and literary and art critic whose reputation rests primarily on Les Fleurs du mal (1857; The Flowers of Evil), which was perhaps the most important and influential poetry collection published in Europe in the 19th century. Similarly, his Petits
- Baudin, Carl (German actor)
stagecraft: Western traditions: …invention of greasepaint belongs to Carl Baudin of the Leipziger Stadt Theatre. Wishing to conceal the join between the front edge of his wig and forehead, he mixed a flesh-coloured paste of zinc white, yellow ochre, vermilion, and lard. By 1890 theatrical greasepaints were available commercially in many colours, and…
- Baudin, Jean-Baptiste (French legislator)
Léon Gambetta: Life: Jean-Baptiste Baudin, a deputy (legislator) killed resisting Napoleon III’s coup d’état of 1851, had become a republican martyr, and eight journalists were being prosecuted for attempting to have a monument erected in his memory. As counsel of one of the accused, Gambetta delivered an extremely…
- Baudin, Nicolas (French explorer)
Australia: Later explorations: Under Nicolas Baudin, it gave French names to many features (including “Terre Napoléon” for the southern coast) and gathered much information but did little new exploration. It was on the northern coast, from Arnhem Land to Cape York Peninsula, that more exploration was needed. Two Admiralty…
- Baudissin, Wolf Heinrich Friedrich Karl, Count von (German translator)
Wolf Heinrich, count von Baudissin was a German diplomat and man of letters who with Dorothea Tieck was responsible for many translations of William Shakespeare and thus contributed to the development of German Romanticism. Baudissin served in the diplomatic corps in Stockholm, Paris, and Vienna
- Baudissin, Wolf Heinrich, Graf von (German translator)
Wolf Heinrich, count von Baudissin was a German diplomat and man of letters who with Dorothea Tieck was responsible for many translations of William Shakespeare and thus contributed to the development of German Romanticism. Baudissin served in the diplomatic corps in Stockholm, Paris, and Vienna
- Baudó Mountains (mountains, Colombia)
South America: The Northern Andes: …have developed that constitute the Baudo, or Coastal, Mountains and the Cordillera Occidental. They were accreted during Cretaceous and early Cenozoic times. Structurally composed of oceanic volcanic arcs that were amalgamated after each collision by high-angle, west-verging thrusts, the Northern Andes are characterized by the heavily deformed metamorphic rocks and…
- Baudot Code (communications)
Baudot Code, telegraph code developed by J.-M.-E. Baudot in France, which by the mid-20th century supplanted the Morse Code for most printing telegraphy. It consisted originally of groups of five “on” and “off” signals of equal duration, representing a substantial economy over the Morse system,
- Baudot, Jean-Maurice-Émile (French engineer)
Jean-Maurice-Émile Baudot was an engineer who, in 1874, received a patent on a telegraph code that by the mid-20th century had supplanted Morse Code as the most commonly used telegraphic alphabet. In Baudot’s code, each letter was represented by a five-unit combination of current-on or current-off
- Baudouin Albert Charles Leopold Axel Marie Gustave of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (king of Belgium)
Baudouin I was the king of the Belgians from 1951 to 1993, who helped restore confidence in the monarchy after the stormy reign of King Leopold III. The son of Leopold III and Queen Astrid, Baudouin shared his father’s internment by the Germans during World War II and his postwar exile in
- Baudouin Bras-de-Fer (count of Flanders)
Baldwin I was the first ruler of Flanders. A daring warrior under Charles II the Bald of France, he fell in love with the king’s daughter Judith, the youthful widow of two English kings, married her (862), and fled with his bride to Lorraine. Charles, though at first angry, was at last conciliated,
- Baudouin de Boulogne (king of Jerusalem)
Baldwin I was the king of the Crusader state of Jerusalem (1100–18) who expanded the kingdom and secured its territory, formulating an administrative apparatus that was to serve for 200 years as the basis for Frankish rule in Syria and Palestine. Son of Eustace II, count of Boulogne, and Ida
- Baudouin de Courtenay (Byzantine emperor)
Baldwin II Porphyrogenitus was the last Latin emperor of Constantinople, who lost his throne in 1261 when Michael VIII Palaeologus restored Greek rule to the capital. The son of Yolande, sister of Baldwin I, the first Latin emperor of Constantinople, and Peter of Courtenay, the third Latin emperor,
- Baudouin de Courtenay, Jan Niecisław (Polish linguist)
Jan Niecisław Baudouin de Courtenay was a linguist who regarded language sounds as structural entities, rather than mere physical phenomena, and thus anticipated the modern linguistic concern with language structure. His long teaching career in eastern European universities began in 1871 and
- Baudouin de Lille (count of Flanders)
William I: New alliances of William I: In 1049 William negotiated with Baldwin V of Flanders for the hand of his daughter, Matilda. Baldwin, an imperial vassal with a distinguished lineage, was in rebellion against the emperor, Henry III, and was in desperate need of allies. At the Council of Reims in October 1049, the emperor’s cousin,…
- Baudouin du Bourcq (king of Jerusalem)
Baldwin II was the count of Edessa (1100–18), king of Jerusalem (1118–31), and Crusade leader whose support of the religious-military orders founded during his reign enabled him to expand his kingdom and to withstand Muslim attacks. A son of Hugh, count of Réthel, in the Ardennes region of France,
- Baudouin I (king of Belgium)
Baudouin I was the king of the Belgians from 1951 to 1993, who helped restore confidence in the monarchy after the stormy reign of King Leopold III. The son of Leopold III and Queen Astrid, Baudouin shared his father’s internment by the Germans during World War II and his postwar exile in
- Baudouin le Barbu (count of Flanders)
Baldwin IV was the count of Flanders (988–1035) who greatly expanded the Flemish dominions. He fought successfully both against the Capetian king of France, Robert II, and the Holy Roman emperor Henry II. Henry found himself obliged to grant to Baldwin IV in fief Valenciennes, the burgraveship of
- Baudouin le Chauve (count of Flanders)
Baldwin II was the second ruler of Flanders, who, from his stronghold at Bruges, maintained, as his father Baldwin I before him, a vigorous defense of his lands against the incursions of the Norsemen. On his mother’s side a descendant of Charlemagne, he strengthened the dynastic importance of his
- Baudouin le Lépreux (king of Jerusalem)
Baldwin IV was the king of Jerusalem (1174–85), called the “leper king” for the disease that afflicted him for most of his short life. His reign saw the growth of factionalism among the Latin nobility that weakened the kingdom during the years when its greatest adversary, the Muslim leader Saladin,