- Bernari, Carlo (Italian author)
Italian literature: The return to order: … [1930; Revolt in Aspromonte]), and Carlo Bernari had to use circumspection in stating their views but were not completely silenced. The controversial Ignazio Silone, having chosen exile, could speak openly in Fontamara (1930). Antonio Gramsci, an unwilling “guest” of the regime, gave testimony to the triumph of spirit over oppression…
- Bernart de Ventadorn (French troubadour)
Bernard de Ventadour was a Provençal troubadour whose poetry is considered the finest in the Provençal language. Bernard is known to have traveled in England in 1152–55. He lived at the court of Eleanor of Aquitaine and then at Toulouse, in later life retiring to the abbey of Dalon. His short love
- Bernays, Edward (American publicist)
Edward Bernays was a pioneer American publicist who is generally considered to have been the first to develop the idea of the professional public relations counselor—i.e., one who draws on the social sciences in order to motivate and shape the response of a general or particular audience. Bernays
- Bernays, Edward L. (American publicist)
Edward Bernays was a pioneer American publicist who is generally considered to have been the first to develop the idea of the professional public relations counselor—i.e., one who draws on the social sciences in order to motivate and shape the response of a general or particular audience. Bernays
- Bernays, Paul Isaak (Swiss logician and mathematician)
Paul Isaak Bernays was a Swiss mathematician whose work in proof theory and axiomatic set theory helped create the new discipline of mathematical logic. After obtaining his doctorate from the University of Göttingen in Germany under Edmund Landau in 1912, Bernays taught for five years at the
- Bernbach, William (American advertising executive)
William Bernbach was an American advertising executive and copywriter, a pioneer of the subtle, low-pressure advertising that became a hallmark of the agency he helped found, Doyle Dane Bernbach, Inc. The firm quickly became one of the most influential in the business, and Bernbach’s approach to
- Bernburg (Germany)
Bernburg, city, Saxony-Anhalt Land (state), central Germany, on the Saale River at the mouth of the Wipper River, south of Magdeburg. First mentioned in 961, it was important in the Middle Ages for its position on an old trade route. Its castle, probably dating from the 10th century and later
- Berne (national capital, Switzerland)
Bern, city, capital of Switzerland and of Bern canton, in the west-central part of the country. It lies along a narrow loop of the Aare River. The existence of the ancient castle of Nydegg, guarding a crossing over the Aare, probably led Berthold V, duke of Zähringen, to found Bern in 1191 as a
- Berne (canton, Switzerland)
Bern, canton, west-central Switzerland. It is the second most populous and second largest of the Swiss cantons; about 100 square miles (260 square km) are occupied by glaciers. Bordering Jura canton (until 1979 part of Bern canton) and Solothurn canton to the north, it is bounded on the west by the
- Berne Convention (copyright law)
Berne Convention, international copyright agreement adopted by an international conference in Bern (Berne) in 1886 and subsequently modified several times (Berlin, 1908; Rome, 1928; Brussels, 1948; Stockholm, 1967; and Paris, 1971). Signatories of the Convention constitute the Berne Copyright
- Berne Copyright Union (signatories of Berne Convention)
Berne Convention: …of the Convention constitute the Berne Copyright Union.
- Berne Railroad Convention
carriage of goods: Mixed-carrier transportation: Under the Berne Railroad Conventions for the carriage of goods, carriage by rail and sea may be subject to the rules governing railroad carriage at the option of the contracting states, unless reservation has been made by them for application of certain rules of maritime law to…
- Berne Union (signatories of Berne Convention)
Berne Convention: …of the Convention constitute the Berne Copyright Union.
- Berne, Eric (American psychologist)
humanistic psychology: …as transactional analysis, developed by Eric Berne. Its goal is to build a strong state of maturity by learning to recognize the “child” and “parent” aspects of personality in oneself and others.
- Berner Alpen (mountains, Switzerland)
Bernese Alps, segment of the Central Alps lying north of the Upper Rhône River and south of the Brienzer and Thunersee (lakes) in Bern and Valais cantons of southwestern Switzerland. The mountains extend east-northeastward from the bend of the Rhône near Martigny-Ville to Grimsel Pass and Haslital
- Berner Alps (mountains, Switzerland)
Bernese Alps, segment of the Central Alps lying north of the Upper Rhône River and south of the Brienzer and Thunersee (lakes) in Bern and Valais cantons of southwestern Switzerland. The mountains extend east-northeastward from the bend of the Rhône near Martigny-Ville to Grimsel Pass and Haslital
- Berner Oberland (mountains, Switzerland)
Bernese Alps, segment of the Central Alps lying north of the Upper Rhône River and south of the Brienzer and Thunersee (lakes) in Bern and Valais cantons of southwestern Switzerland. The mountains extend east-northeastward from the bend of the Rhône near Martigny-Ville to Grimsel Pass and Haslital
- Berner Platte (food)
sauerkraut: …such as choucroute garnie and Berner Platte.
- Berner Synodus (work by Capito)
Wolfgang Fabricius Capito: …work is considered to be Berner Synodus (after the synod held at Bern, Switzerland, in 1532), which deals essentially with church discipline and pastoral instruction. An active participant in several important church synods, he died of plague while returning from the colloquy of Regensburg.
- Berner Zeitung (Swiss newspaper)
Jakob Stämpfli: …of a local newspaper (Berner Zeitung), Stämpfli participated in the abortive armed attack on the clericalist government of Luzern (1845) and between 1846 and 1850 played an important role in the cantonal politics of Bern. After conservative gains in the elections of 1850, he used the Berner Zeitung to…
- Berners, Dame Juliana (English prioress)
Dame Juliana Berners was an English prioress and author of A Treatyse of Fysshynge wyth an Angle (1496), the earliest known volume on sport fishing. Berners’s work predates Englishman Izaak Walton’s The Compleat Angler (1653), the best-known example of early angling literature, by approximately 150
- Berners, John Bourchier, 2nd Baron (English statesman and author)
John Bourchier, 2nd Baron Berners was an English writer and statesman, best known for his simple, fresh, and energetic translation (vol. 1, 1523; vol. 2, 1525) from the French of Jean Froissart’s Chroniques. Berners’ active political and military career started early when at the age of 15 he was
- Berners-Lee, Sir Tim (British scientist)
Tim Berners-Lee is a British computer scientist, generally credited as the inventor of the World Wide Web. In 2004, he was awarded a knighthood by Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and the inaugural Millennium Technology Prize (€1 million) by the Finnish Technology Award Foundation.
- Berners-Lee, Tim (British scientist)
Tim Berners-Lee is a British computer scientist, generally credited as the inventor of the World Wide Web. In 2004, he was awarded a knighthood by Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and the inaugural Millennium Technology Prize (€1 million) by the Finnish Technology Award Foundation.
- bernesco (literary style)
Francesco Berni: …Italian burlesque, which was called bernesco and imitated by many poets.
- Bernese (Swiss dialect)
Swiss literature: …are vigorous novels in the Bernese dialect by the 20th-century writers Rudolf von Tavel and Simon Gfeller. Schaffhausen is represented in the novels of Albert Bächtold, and Joseph Reinhart wrote in the dialect of Solothurn.
- Bernese Alps (mountains, Switzerland)
Bernese Alps, segment of the Central Alps lying north of the Upper Rhône River and south of the Brienzer and Thunersee (lakes) in Bern and Valais cantons of southwestern Switzerland. The mountains extend east-northeastward from the bend of the Rhône near Martigny-Ville to Grimsel Pass and Haslital
- Bernese Mountain Dog (breed of dog)
Bernese Mountain Dog, breed of working dog taken to Switzerland more than 2,000 years ago by invading Romans. The breed was widely used to pull carts and to drive cattle to and from their pastures and to protect farms from predators. Bernese Mountain Dogs, also called Berners, are noted for their
- Bernese Oberland (mountains, Switzerland)
Bernese Alps, segment of the Central Alps lying north of the Upper Rhône River and south of the Brienzer and Thunersee (lakes) in Bern and Valais cantons of southwestern Switzerland. The mountains extend east-northeastward from the bend of the Rhône near Martigny-Ville to Grimsel Pass and Haslital
- Bernhard Leopold Frederik Everhard Julius Coert Karel Godfried Pieter, prins der Nederlanden, prins van Lippe-Biesterfeld (prince of the Netherlands)
Bernhard, prince of the Netherlands, prince of Lippe-Biesterfeld was a prince of the Netherlands who, during World War II, served as liaison between the Dutch government-in-exile and the British armed forces and commanded the Netherlands Forces of the Interior (1944–45). Bernhard was the son of
- Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar (duke of Saxe-Weimar)
Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar was the duke of Saxe-Weimar (Sachsen-Weimar), a politically ambitious Protestant general during the Thirty Years’ War (1618–48). One of the most successful field commanders of his age, he won a number of important victories over the forces of the Austrian Habsburgs. Having
- Bernhard, Lucian (German artist)
graphic design: Early developments: Initiated by Lucian Bernhard with his first poster in 1905, Plakatstil was characterized by a simple visual language of sign and shape. Designers reduced images of products to elemental, symbolic shapes that were placed over a flat background colour, and they lettered the product name in bold…
- Bernhard, prince of the Netherlands, prince of Lippe-Biesterfeld (prince of the Netherlands)
Bernhard, prince of the Netherlands, prince of Lippe-Biesterfeld was a prince of the Netherlands who, during World War II, served as liaison between the Dutch government-in-exile and the British armed forces and commanded the Netherlands Forces of the Interior (1944–45). Bernhard was the son of
- Bernhard, Thomas (Austrian writer)
Thomas Bernhard was an Austrian writer who explored death, social injustice, and human misery in controversial literature that was deeply pessimistic about modern civilization in general and Austrian culture in particular. Bernhard was born in a Holland convent; his mother, unwed at the time, had
- Bernhardi, Friedrich von (German soldier and military writer)
Friedrich von Bernhardi was a German soldier and military writer. He fought in the Franco-Prussian War and became commander of the Seventh Army corps in 1909. In 1911 he published Germany and the Next War, arguing that Germany had a right and responsibility to wage war to gain the power it
- Bernhardt, Curtis (American film director)
Curtis Bernhardt was a German-born film director who specialized in movies that were geared toward a female audience. (Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film preservation.) Bernhardt, who was Jewish, had already directed a dozen films in his native Germany when an arrest by the Gestapo in
- Bernhardt, Kurt (American film director)
Curtis Bernhardt was a German-born film director who specialized in movies that were geared toward a female audience. (Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film preservation.) Bernhardt, who was Jewish, had already directed a dozen films in his native Germany when an arrest by the Gestapo in
- Bernhardt, Sarah (French actress)
Sarah Bernhardt was the greatest French actress of the later 19th century and one of the best-known figures in the history of the stage. Bernhardt was the illegitimate daughter of Julie Bernard, a Dutch courtesan who had established herself in Paris (the identity of her father is uncertain). As the
- Bernheim, Hippolyte (German physician)
hypnosis: History and early research: …techniques, drew the support of Hippolyte Bernheim, a professor of medicine at Strasbourg. Independently they had written that hypnosis involved no physical forces and no physiological processes but was a combination of psychologically mediated responses to suggestions. During a visit to France at about the same time, Austrian physician Sigmund…
- Berni, Antonio (Argentine artist)
Antonio Berni was an Argentine artist known for his socially committed art. Berni had his first exhibition when still a teenager and received a scholarship to study painting in Europe in 1925. After visiting Madrid he settled in Paris, where he studied with the painters André Lhote and Othon
- Berni, Francesco (Italian poet and translator)
Francesco Berni was a poet and translator important for his Tuscan version of Matteo Boiardo’s epic poem Orlando innamorato (1483) and for the distinctive style of his Italian burlesque, which was called bernesco and imitated by many poets. Berni spent his early years in Florence. In 1517 he
- Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum (museum, Honolulu, Hawaii, United States)
Bishop Museum, research centre and museum for the study of Hawaiian and Polynesian archaeology, natural history, and culture in Honolulu, Hawaii, U.S. The largest museum in the state of Hawaii, it exhibits Hawaiian and Polynesian arts, crafts, artifacts, and flora and fauna. Among items on display
- Bernicia (historical kingdom, England)
Bernicia, in British history, a northern Anglo-Saxon kingdom that by the last quarter of the 7th century had become permanently united with its neighbour Deira to form the kingdom of Northumbria. Bernicia stretched northward from perhaps as far south as the River Tees, ultimately reaching the Firth
- Bernicia-Martinez Bridge (bridge, California, United States)
Martinez: …and the opening of the Benicia-Martinez Bridge (1962) across the strait (with construction of a new bridge begun in 1999) boosted the city’s port and industrial development (petroleum, chemicals, steel, and copper). Local attractions include the Martinez Museum and the Don Vicente Martinez Adobe (built 1849). Martinez is the birthplace…
- Bernie (film by Linklater [2011])
Richard Linklater: Before Sunset, Before Midnight, and Boyhood: …to his Texas roots with Bernie (2011), a black comedy based on the real-life murder of a wealthy widow (played by Shirley MacLaine) by her business manager, a former mortician (Black), in a small East Texas town. (In 2014, after a defense attorney who was inspired by the film secured…
- Bernie Mac Show, The (American television series)
African Americans: Television and film: The Bernie Mac Show, a sitcom starring comedian Bernie Mac, won a Peabody Award in 2001.
- Bernier, Maxime (Canadian politician)
Canadian Federal Election of 2011: First term: …at the Defense Ministry, and Maxime Bernier took over as foreign minister.
- Bernières, Louis de (British author)
Captain Corelli’s Mandolin: …novel written by British author Louis de Bernières and published in 1994. It received the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize in 1995 and became an international best seller.
- Bernigaud, Louis-Marie-Hilaire, comte de Chardonnet (French chemist)
Hilaire Bernigaud, count de Chardonnet was a French chemist and industrialist who first developed and manufactured rayon. Trained as a civil engineer after completing scientific studies under Louis Pasteur, Chardonnet began to develop an artificial fibre in 1878. Obtaining a patent in 1884 on a
- Bernina Alps (mountains, Switzerland)
Bernina Alps, part of the Rhaetian Alps in eastern Switzerland along the Italian border, lying southeast of the Engadin (valley of the Upper Inn River). The scenic range rises to Bernina Peak (13,284 feet [4,049 m]), which was first ascended in 1850 by the Swiss climber Johann Coaz. Bernina Pass
- Bernina Pass (mountain pass, Italy)
Valtellina: … (9,042 feet [2,756 m]), the Bernina (7,621 feet [2,323 m]), the Aprica (3,858 feet [1,176 m]), and the Umbrail (9,944 feet [3,031 m]).
- Bernina Peak (mountain, Europe)
Rhaetian Alps: Bernina Peak (13,284 feet [4,049 meters]), on the Italian border, is the highest point. Included within the Rhaetian Alps are the subranges of Silvretta, Rhätikon, and the Albula and Bernina Alps. The Engadin (valley of the Upper Inn River) cuts northeast to southwest among these…
- Bernini, Gian Lorenzo (Italian artist)
Gian Lorenzo Bernini was an Italian artist who was perhaps the greatest sculptor of the 17th century and an outstanding architect as well. Bernini created the Baroque style of sculpture and developed it to such an extent that other artists are of only minor importance in a discussion of that style.
- Bernini, Giovanni (Italian artist)
Gian Lorenzo Bernini was an Italian artist who was perhaps the greatest sculptor of the 17th century and an outstanding architect as well. Bernini created the Baroque style of sculpture and developed it to such an extent that other artists are of only minor importance in a discussion of that style.
- Bernini, Pietro (Italian sculptor)
Pietro Bernini was an Italian late Mannerist sculptor who was invited to Rome in 1605/06 to work for Pope Paul V (1605–21) on the decorations of the Paolina (Borghese) Chapel in the Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore, where he carved the coronation of Clement VIII (1612–13), as well as the marble
- Bernis, François-Joachim de Pierre de (French statesman and cardinal)
François-Joachim de Pierre de Bernis was a French statesman and cardinal who played an important part in the diplomatic revolution of 1756–57, in the suppression of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) by the papacy in 1773, and in the unsuccessful negotiations in 1790–91 between the French Revolutionary
- Bernlef, J. (Dutch poet and critic)
Hendrik Marsman was one of the outstanding Dutch poets and critics active between World War I and World War II. Marsman studied law and practiced in Utrecht, but after 1933 he travelled in Europe and devoted himself to literature. Under the influence of the German Expressionists, Marsman made his
- Bernoises, Alpes (mountains, Switzerland)
Bernese Alps, segment of the Central Alps lying north of the Upper Rhône River and south of the Brienzer and Thunersee (lakes) in Bern and Valais cantons of southwestern Switzerland. The mountains extend east-northeastward from the bend of the Rhône near Martigny-Ville to Grimsel Pass and Haslital
- Bernolák, Josef (Slovak scholar)
Slovakia: Literature and drama: …recently codified by another priest, Anton Bernolák, who had based his codification on the Western Slovak dialect. Yet Bernolák’s Slovak failed to catch on, owing to a lack of followers and strong opposition by educated Slovak Lutherans, who used Czech as their literary language. Even Ján Kollár’s Slávy dcera (1824;…
- Bernold of Constance (German scholar)
canon law: Development of canon law in the West: …written between 1070 and 1091, Bernold of Constance listed several criteria for the reconciliation of conflicting texts, including authenticity of the text; identity of the author; difference between law, counsel, and dispensation; difference between universal and local law; difference of time and place; and different meanings of a word. A…
- Bernoulli distribution (mathematics)
binomial distribution, in statistics, a common distribution function for discrete processes in which a fixed probability prevails for each independently generated value. First studied in connection with games of pure chance, the binomial distribution is now widely used to analyze data in virtually
- Bernoulli family (Swiss mathematicians)
Bernoulli family, Two generations of distinguished Swiss mathematicians. Jakob (1655–1705) and Johann (1667–1748) were the sons of a pharmacist who wanted one boy to study theology and the other medicine. Over his objections, both pursued careers in mathematics, making important discoveries in
- Bernoulli’s law (physics)
Bernoulli’s theorem, in fluid dynamics, relation among the pressure, velocity, and elevation in a moving fluid (liquid or gas), the compressibility and viscosity (internal friction) of which are negligible and the flow of which is steady, or laminar. First derived (1738) by the Swiss mathematician
- Bernoulli’s principle (physics)
Bernoulli’s theorem, in fluid dynamics, relation among the pressure, velocity, and elevation in a moving fluid (liquid or gas), the compressibility and viscosity (internal friction) of which are negligible and the flow of which is steady, or laminar. First derived (1738) by the Swiss mathematician
- Bernoulli’s theorem (physics)
Bernoulli’s theorem, in fluid dynamics, relation among the pressure, velocity, and elevation in a moving fluid (liquid or gas), the compressibility and viscosity (internal friction) of which are negligible and the flow of which is steady, or laminar. First derived (1738) by the Swiss mathematician
- Bernoulli, Daniel (Swiss mathematician)
Daniel Bernoulli was the most distinguished of the second generation of the Bernoulli family of Swiss mathematicians. He investigated not only mathematics but also such fields as medicine, biology, physiology, mechanics, physics, astronomy, and oceanography. Bernoulli’s theorem (q.v.), which he
- Bernoulli, Jakob (Swiss mathematician)
Jakob Bernoulli was the first of the Bernoulli family of Swiss mathematicians. He introduced the first principles of the calculus of variation. Bernoulli numbers, a concept that he developed, were named for him. The scion of a family of drug merchants, Jakob Bernoulli was compelled to study
- Bernoulli, Johann (Swiss mathematician)
Johann Bernoulli was a major member of the Bernoulli family of Swiss mathematicians. He investigated the then new mathematical calculus, which he applied to the measurement of curves, to differential equations, and to mechanical problems. The son of a pharmacist, Johann studied medicine and
- Bernoulli, lemniscate of (mathematics)
mathematics: History of analysis: …of the rectification of the lemniscate, a ribbon-shaped curve discovered by Jakob Bernoulli in 1694, Giulio Carlo Fagnano (1682–1766) introduced ingenious analytic transformations that laid the foundation for the theory of elliptic integrals. Nikolaus I Bernoulli (1687–1759), the nephew of Johann and Jakob, proved the equality of mixed second-order partial…
- Bernoulli, Nikolaus I (Swiss mathematician)
mathematics: History of analysis: Nikolaus I Bernoulli (1687–1759), the nephew of Johann and Jakob, proved the equality of mixed second-order partial derivatives and made important contributions to differential equations by the construction of orthogonal trajectories to families of curves. Pierre Varignon (1654–1722), Johann Bernoulli, and Jakob Hermann (1678–1733) continued…
- Berns, Augusto (German adventurer)
Machu Picchu: …visited by the German adventurer Augusto Berns in 1867. However, Machu Picchu’s existence was not widely known in the West until it was “discovered” in 1911 by the Yale University professor Hiram Bingham, who was led to the site by Melchor Arteaga, a local Quechua-speaking resident. Bingham had been seeking…
- Berns, Laurence (American writer)
censorship: Character and freedom: Laurence Berns has reformulated the ancient dilemma posed by the trial of Socrates, “the greatest hero of freedom of thought”—a dilemma that exposes one of the roots of the perennial censorship controversy:
- Bernstein and the Social Democratic Program (work by Kautsky)
Marxism: The work of Kautsky and Bernstein: …were made by Kautsky in Bernstein und das Sozialdemokratische Programm: Eine Antikritik (1899; “Bernstein and the Social Democratic Program”) and the Polish-born Marxist Rosa Luxemburg in Sozialreform oder Revolution (Reform or Revolution), both in 1899. Bernstein focused first of all upon the labour theory of value. Along
- Bernstein und das Sozialdemokratische Program: Eine Antikritik (work by Kautsky)
Marxism: The work of Kautsky and Bernstein: …were made by Kautsky in Bernstein und das Sozialdemokratische Programm: Eine Antikritik (1899; “Bernstein and the Social Democratic Program”) and the Polish-born Marxist Rosa Luxemburg in Sozialreform oder Revolution (Reform or Revolution), both in 1899. Bernstein focused first of all upon the labour theory of value. Along
- Bernstein v. the U.S. Department of State (law case)
Bernstein v. the U.S. Department of State, landmark legal decision (1996) that set two important precedents in the field of digital technology. First, it ruled that U.S. government regulations that barred the export of encryption software were unconstitutionally restrictive; second, it declared
- Bernstein, Aline Frankau (American theatrical designer and writer)
Aline Frankau Bernstein was a theatrical designer and writer, the first major woman designer for the American stage. Aline Frankau attended Hunter College and the New York School for Applied Design before her marriage to Theodore Bernstein in 1902. She developed her artistic talent studying under
- Bernstein, Carl (American reporter)
All the President’s Men: …by The Washington Post journalists Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward and published in 1974. The book recounts their experiences as journalists covering the break-in on June 17, 1972, at the Democratic National Committee headquarters in the Watergate complex in Washington, D.C., and the subsequent Watergate scandal that they brought to…
- Bernstein, Daniel (American mathematician)
Bernstein v. the U.S. Department of State: government and Daniel Bernstein, a mathematics professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago, to determine if he had the right to distribute encryption software of his own creation over the Internet. Bernstein had devised his encryption program, called Snuffle, in 1990 while he was a Ph.D.…
- Bernstein, Eduard (German political theorist)
Eduard Bernstein was a Social Democratic propagandist, political theorist, and historian, one of the first Socialists to attempt a revision of Karl Marx’s tenets, such as abandoning the ideas of the imminent collapse of the capitalist economy and the seizure of power by the proletariat. Although he
- Bernstein, Elmer (American composer)
Elmer Bernstein was an American film composer who created the scores for more than 200 motion pictures during a career that spanned half a century and produced some of Hollywood’s most memorable film music. Bernstein fashioned the style of his music to reflect the mood and action of its film, and
- Bernstein, Henry (French dramatist)
Henry Bernstein was a French playwright, initially popular for a series of sensational melodramas, who later turned to more serious themes, experimented with new forms, and campaigned against antisemitism and Nazism. Son of a wealthy Jewish banker, Bernstein attended the University of Cambridge and
- Bernstein, Henry (-Léon-Gustave-Charles) (French dramatist)
Henry Bernstein was a French playwright, initially popular for a series of sensational melodramas, who later turned to more serious themes, experimented with new forms, and campaigned against antisemitism and Nazism. Son of a wealthy Jewish banker, Bernstein attended the University of Cambridge and
- Bernstein, Jeremy (American physicist)
Jeremy Bernstein is an American physicist, educator, and writer widely known for the clarity of his writing for the lay reader on the major issues of modern physics. After graduation from Harvard University (Ph.D., 1955), Bernstein worked at Harvard and at the Institute of Advanced Studies at
- Bernstein, Julius (German scientist)
biophysics: The nerve impulse: Julius Bernstein, an experimental neurophysiologist, used physical chemical theories to develop a membrane theory of nervous conduction; Hodgkin’s initial experiments were designed to test specific predictions of the Bernstein hypothesis. Early in 1938 Hodgkin learned of the important results of a newly developed technique that…
- Bernstein, Leonard (American composer and conductor)
Leonard Bernstein was an American conductor, composer, and pianist noted for his accomplishments in both classical and popular music, for his flamboyant conducting style, and for his pedagogic flair, especially in concerts for young people. Bernstein played piano from age 10. He attended Boston
- Bernstein, Morris (American artist)
Morris Louis was an American painter associated with the New York school of Abstract Expressionism who is notable for his distinctly personal use of colour, often in brilliant bands or stripes. Louis studied painting at the Maryland Institute, Baltimore (1929–33), and from 1937 to 1940 he worked as
- Bernstorff, Albrecht, Count von (Prussian statesman)
Albrecht, count von Bernstorff was a Prussian statesman known for his charm and diplomatic skill. A widely traveled career diplomat, Bernstorff was dispatched to Vienna during the Revolution of 1848 and quickly distinguished himself as a conservative opponent of the then current schemes for German
- Bernstorff, Andreas Peter, Greve von (Danish foreign minister)
Andreas Peter, Greve (count) von Bernstorff was a statesman who maintained the neutrality of Denmark during the last quarter of the 18th century and who took a leading part in Danish domestic reform. In 1758 Bernstorff joined the Danish Foreign Office, from which he was dismissed in 1770. He
- Bernstorff, Christian Günther, Graf von (Danish diplomat)
Christian Günther, count von Bernstorff was a Danish diplomat who was foreign minister (1818–32) of Prussia and an architect of the German customs union (Zollverein). The son of the diplomat Andreas Peter, Graf von Bernstorff, he served as Danish ambassador in Stockholm from 1794 to May 1797 and in
- Bernstorff, Christian Günther, Greve af (Danish diplomat)
Christian Günther, count von Bernstorff was a Danish diplomat who was foreign minister (1818–32) of Prussia and an architect of the German customs union (Zollverein). The son of the diplomat Andreas Peter, Graf von Bernstorff, he served as Danish ambassador in Stockholm from 1794 to May 1797 and in
- Bernstorff, J.H.E., Count von (Danish statesman)
J.H.E., count von Bernstorff was a Danish statesman who as foreign minister preserved Denmark’s neutrality during the Seven Years’ War and strengthened the rights of the Danish crown against Russia in the duchy of Holstein. Bernstorff was introduced into the Danish diplomatic service in 1733 by
- Bernstorff, Johann Hartwig Ernst, Count von (Danish statesman)
J.H.E., count von Bernstorff was a Danish statesman who as foreign minister preserved Denmark’s neutrality during the Seven Years’ War and strengthened the rights of the Danish crown against Russia in the duchy of Holstein. Bernstorff was introduced into the Danish diplomatic service in 1733 by
- Bernstorff, Johann-Heinrich, Count von (German diplomat)
Johann-Heinrich, count von Bernstorff was a German diplomat who represented his country in London and Cairo and, as ambassador, in Washington, D.C. (1908–17). The son of the Prussian diplomat Count Albrecht von Bernstorff, he entered the diplomatic service in 1899, was secretary of legation
- Bernt Michael Holmboe Memorial Prize (education award)
Abel Prize: …2005 the fund created the Bernt Michael Holmboe Memorial Prize for the promotion of excellence in teaching mathematics, in honour of Abel’s own mathematics teacher.
- Bernward (Saxon bishop)
Western architecture: Ottonian period: In Saxony, the art-loving bishop Bernward, who had seen the great basilicas in Rome and had come into contact with Classical art, was the great builder; about 1001 he founded the abbey church of St. Michael in his episcopal city of Hildesheim. At an earlier date (961) the margrave Gero…
- Berny, Council of (French history)
St. Gregory of Tours: …tried for slander at the council of Berny-Rivière in 580. Partly because of the intervention of his friend Venantius Fortunatus, who delivered a poetic panegyric of Chilperic at the time of the trial, Gregory was acquitted. Yet, despite this episode and Gregory’s criticism of Chilperic (whom he called “the Nero…
- Beroe cucumis (comb jelly)
ctenophore: Form and function.: >Beroe cucumis is pink and the Venus’s girdle (Cestum veneris) is delicate violet. The colourless species are transparent when suspended in water, except for their beautifully iridescent rows of comb plates. Most of the comb jellies are bioluminescent; they exhibit nocturnal displays of bluish or…
- Beroea (Greece)
Véroia, dímos (municipality) and commercial centre of Greek Macedonia (Modern Greek: Makedonía), Central Macedonia (Kendrikí Makedonía) periféreia (region), northern Greece. It lies on a plateau at the western edge of the Thessaloníki (Salonika) plain, at the eastern foot of the Vérmio (also
- Beroea (Bulgaria)
Stara Zagora, town, central Bulgaria. It lies in the southern foothills of the Sredna Mountains and on the fringe of the fertile Stara Zagora plain. The town has varied industries producing cotton, textiles, chemicals, fertilizers, agricultural implements, machine tools, and cigarettes as well as
- Beroerten, Raad van (Netherlands history)
Council of Troubles, (1567–74), special court in the Low Countries organized by the Spanish governor, the Duke of Alba, which initiated a reign of terror against all elements suspected of heresy or rebellion. Alba’s dispatch to the Netherlands at the head of a large army in the summer of 1567 had