• Fitzroy, Charles (English noble)

    Charles Fitzroy, 1st duke of Southampton was the natural son of Charles II by Barbara Villiers, countess of Castlemaine. When his mother became duchess of Cleveland and countess of Southampton in 1670, he was allowed to assume the name of Fitzroy and the courtesy title of earl of Southampton. In

  • Fitzroy, Henry (English noble)

    Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey: …Windsor with his father’s ward, Henry Fitzroy, Duke of Richmond, who was the son of Henry VIII and his mistress Elizabeth Blount. In 1532, after talk of marriage with the princess Mary (daughter of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon), he married Lady Frances de Vere, the 14-year-old daughter of…

  • Fitzroy, James (English noble)

    James Scott, duke of Monmouth was a claimant to the English throne who led an unsuccessful rebellion against King James II in 1685. Although the strikingly handsome Monmouth had the outward bearing of an ideal monarch, he lacked the intelligence and resolution needed for a determined struggle for

  • Fitzroy, Robert (British scientist)

    Robert Fitzroy was a British naval officer, hydrographer, and meteorologist who commanded the voyage of HMS Beagle, which sailed around the world with Charles Darwin aboard as naturalist. The voyage provided Darwin with much of the material on which he based his theory of evolution. Fitzroy entered

  • Fitzroya cupressoides (tree, Fitzroya cupressoides)

    alerce, (species Fitzroya cupressoides), coniferous tree that is the only species of the genus Fitzroya, of the cypress family (Cupressaceae), native to southern Chile and southern Argentina. In the wild it grows to become one of the oldest and largest trees in the world. The alerce is thought to

  • Fitzsimmons, Bob (English boxer)

    Robert Fitzsimmons was a British-born boxer, the first fighter to hold the world boxing championship in three weight divisions. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on boxing.) A New Zealand resident as a young man, Fitzsimmons went to the United States in 1890, having already established a

  • Fitzsimmons, Fat Freddie (American athlete)

    Fat Freddie Fitzsimmons was a professional right-handed baseball pitcher for the National League who was famous for his windup, in which he rotated his pitching arm while twisting his body so that he faced second base before turning to deliver the pitch. His best pitches were a knuckle ball and a

  • Fitzsimmons, Frederick Landis (American athlete)

    Fat Freddie Fitzsimmons was a professional right-handed baseball pitcher for the National League who was famous for his windup, in which he rotated his pitching arm while twisting his body so that he faced second base before turning to deliver the pitch. His best pitches were a knuckle ball and a

  • Fitzsimmons, James E. (American horse trainer)

    Sunny Jim Fitzsimmons was an American racehorse trainer who during his 78-year career trained the winners of 2,275 races, bringing in purses totalling more than $13 million. He trained more than 250 winners of stakes events, including two winners of the American Triple Crown (the Kentucky Derby,

  • Fitzsimmons, Robert (English boxer)

    Robert Fitzsimmons was a British-born boxer, the first fighter to hold the world boxing championship in three weight divisions. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on boxing.) A New Zealand resident as a young man, Fitzsimmons went to the United States in 1890, having already established a

  • Fitzsimmons, Ruby Robert (English boxer)

    Robert Fitzsimmons was a British-born boxer, the first fighter to hold the world boxing championship in three weight divisions. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on boxing.) A New Zealand resident as a young man, Fitzsimmons went to the United States in 1890, having already established a

  • Fitzsimmons, Sunny Jim (American horse trainer)

    Sunny Jim Fitzsimmons was an American racehorse trainer who during his 78-year career trained the winners of 2,275 races, bringing in purses totalling more than $13 million. He trained more than 250 winners of stakes events, including two winners of the American Triple Crown (the Kentucky Derby,

  • FitzSimons, Maureen (American actress)

    Maureen O’Hara was an Irish-American actress known for her portrayals of willful women. FitzSimons was the second of six children born to the manager of a hat manufacturer and his wife, a fashion designer and sometime opera singer and actress. She began acting as a child, and, after a series of

  • Fitzthedmar, Arnold (English alderman)

    Arnold Fitzthedmar was a London alderman and merchant who compiled a chronicle of the mayors and sheriffs of London, 1188–1274. He was the son of German parents from Bremen and Cologne, who had become London citizens (his father’s name was Thedmar). He was well educated and connected by marriage

  • Fitzwalter, Baron (governor of Ireland)

    Thomas Radcliffe, 3rd earl of Sussex was an English lord lieutenant of Ireland who suppressed a rebellion of the Roman Catholics in the far north of England in 1569. He was the first governor of Ireland to attempt, to any considerable extent, enforcement of English authority beyond the Pale

  • Fitzwalter, Baron (governor of Ireland)

    Thomas Radcliffe, 3rd earl of Sussex was an English lord lieutenant of Ireland who suppressed a rebellion of the Roman Catholics in the far north of England in 1569. He was the first governor of Ireland to attempt, to any considerable extent, enforcement of English authority beyond the Pale

  • Fitzwalter, Robert (English noble)

    Robert Fitzwalter was an English baronial leader against King John. He first came into prominence as joint constable, with his cousin Saher de Quency (later earl of Winchester), of the castle of Vaudreuil, which, in mysterious circumstances, they surrendered to the French king Philip II in 1203.

  • Fitzwalter, Viscount (governor of Ireland)

    Thomas Radcliffe, 3rd earl of Sussex was an English lord lieutenant of Ireland who suppressed a rebellion of the Roman Catholics in the far north of England in 1569. He was the first governor of Ireland to attempt, to any considerable extent, enforcement of English authority beyond the Pale

  • Fitzwater, Marlin (American press secretary)

    White House press secretary: Successes and failures in the late 20th century: Marlin Fitzwater served both Reagan and George H.W. Bush. Whereas Reagan was the “Great Communicator,” Bush was not as effective on television or in formal speeches. However, Bush possessed thorough knowledge of the issues and was comfortable in the briefing room. He met with reporters…

  • Fitzwilliam Museum (museum, Cambridge, England, United Kingdom)

    Fitzwilliam Museum, museum located in Cambridge, England. The museum was erected to house the collection bequeathed in 1816 to the University of Cambridge by Viscount Fitzwilliam. The original building was designed by architect George Basevi and was completed, after Basevi’s death in 1845, by

  • Fitzwilliam Virginal Book (music collection)

    Fitzwilliam Virginal Book, an early 17th-century English manuscript collection of 297 pieces for keyboard by many of the major composers of the period, including William Byrd, who is represented by 67 pieces; John Bull (44); Giles Farnaby (52); and Peter Philips (19). In his preface to the 1899

  • Fitzwilliam, William (English admiral)

    William Fitzwilliam, earl of Southampton was an English admiral during the reign of Henry VIII. A son of Sir William Fitzwilliam of Aldwarke, near Rotherham, Fitzwilliam was a companion in boyhood of Henry VIII and was knighted for his services at the siege of Tournai in 1513. Later he was

  • Fitzwilliam, William Wentworth, 2nd Earl of (British viceroy of Ireland)

    John Beresford: …of Ireland, the 2nd Earl Fitzwilliam, who advocated conciliating other Irishmen besides the Protestant landowners. Fitzwilliam, however, was quickly superseded by the 2nd Earl (afterward 1st Marquess) Camden, who began a program of Irish repression that had Beresford’s full approval. Beresford was involved in planning the fiscal relations between Great…

  • Fitzwilly (film by Mann [1967])

    Delbert Mann: Feature films: The lacklustre comedy Fitzwilly (1967) centers on a butler (Dick Van Dyke) who plans to rob a department store on Christmas Eve—for a good cause.

  • Fiume (Croatia)

    Rijeka, city, major port and industrial, commercial, and cultural centre of western Croatia. It is located on the Kvarner (a gulf of the Adriatic Sea) and is the country’s major port. The city is situated on a narrow flatland between the Julian Alps and the Adriatic, spreading up the slopes and

  • Fiume Metauro (river, Italy)

    Metauro River, river, Marche region, central Italy, rising in the Etruscan Apennines (Appennino Tosco-Emiliano) and flowing for 68 mi (109 km) east-northeast into the Adriatic Sea just south of Fano. The lower valley of the river (the ancient Metaurus) was the scene of a great Roman victory over

  • Fiume question (European history)

    Fiume question, post-World War I controversy between Italy and Yugoslavia over the control of the Adriatic port of Fiume (known in Croatia as Rijeka; q.v.). Although the secret Treaty of London (April 26, 1915) had assigned Fiume to Yugoslavia, the Italians claimed it at the Paris Peace Conference

  • Fiume Trebbia (river, Italy)

    Trebbia River, river, Emilia-Romagna region, northern Italy, rising in the Ligurian Apennines at an elevation of 4,613 feet (1,406 metres) northeast of Genoa and flowing 71 miles (115 km) north-northeast across the northern Apennines and the Po lowland to enter the Po River just west of Piacenza

  • Fiume Volturno (river, Italy)

    Volturno River, river, south-central Italy. It rises in the Abruzzese Apennines near Alfedena and flows southeast as far as its junction with the Calore River near Caiazzo. It then turns southwest, past Capua, to enter the Tyrrhenian Sea at Castel Volturno, northwest of Naples. The river is 109

  • Fiurelli, Tiberio (Italian actor)

    Tiberio Fiorillo was an Italian actor of the commedia dell’arte who developed the character Scaramouche. Perhaps the son of Silvio Fiorillo, a famous Pulcinella, Tiberio Fiorillo quit an undistinguished company of players to gain fame as the braggart captain called Scaramuccia. He was especially

  • Fiuri de tapo (work by Marin)

    Biagio Marin: His first poetry collection, Fiuri de tapo (1912; “Flowers of Cork”), introduced his characteristic subjects, including the sea, the wind, and the rhythms of life in an Italian island village. Love of his fellows and of God are also recurring themes, and Marin’s expressions extend to tragedy as well…

  • FIVB (sports organization)

    volleyball: History: The Fédération Internationale de Volley Ball (FIVB) was organized in Paris in 1947 and moved to Lausanne, Switzerland, in 1984. The USVBA was one of the 13 charter members of the FIVB, whose membership grew to more than 210 member countries by the late 20th century.

  • Five (American television movie [2011])

    Jennifer Aniston: Later films and The Morning Show: …up the cable TV movie Five (2011), which focused on women living with breast cancer, and was one of 100 artists and other public figures to narrate the documentary film Unity (2015), which investigates human existence and interconnectivity.

  • five (number)

    number symbolism: 5: The sum of the first even and odd numbers (2 + 3) is 5. (To the Pythagoreans 1 was not a number and was not odd.) It therefore symbolizes human life and—in the Platonic and Pythagorean traditions—marriage, as the sum of the female 2…

  • Five Articles Oath (Japanese history)

    Charter Oath, in Japanese history, statement of principle promulgated on April 6, 1868, by the emperor Meiji after the overthrow of the Tokugawa shogunate and the restoration of direct participation in government by the imperial family. The Charter Oath opened the way for the modernization of the

  • Five Articles of Perth (Scottish religious history)

    Scotland: James VI (1567–1625): …after encountering hostility over his Five Articles of Perth (1618), which imposed kneeling at communion, observance of holy days, confirmation, infant baptism, and other practices.

  • Five Bells (poem by Slessor)

    Kenneth Slessor: …World War II, and “Five Bells,” his most important poem, a meditation on art, time, and death.

  • Five Books of Moses (sacred text)

    Torah, in Judaism, in the broadest sense, the substance of divine revelation to Israel, the Jewish people: God’s revealed teaching or guidance for humankind. The meaning of “Torah” is often restricted to signify the first five books of the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament), also called the Law (or the

  • Five Came Back (film by Farrow [1939])

    John Farrow: Early life and work: …series to star George Sanders; Five Came Back, a jungle-survival melodrama with Lucille Ball, Chester Morris, and John Carradine; Reno with Richard Dix; and Sorority House, an Anne Shirley drama written by Dalton Trumbo.

  • Five Celestial Buddhas (Buddhism)

    Dhyani-Buddha, in Mahayana Buddhism, and particularly in Vajrayana (Tantric) Buddhism, any of a group of five “self-born” celestial buddhas who have always existed from the beginning of time. The five are usually identified as Vairochana, Akshobhya, Ratnasambhava, Amitabha, and Amoghasiddhi.

  • Five Civilized Tribes (North American Indian confederacy)

    Five Civilized Tribes, term that has been used officially and unofficially since at least 1866 to designate the Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, and Seminole Indians in Oklahoma (former Indian Territory). Beginning in 1874, they were dealt with as a single body by the Bureau of Indian Affairs

  • Five Classics (Chinese texts)

    Wujing, five ancient Chinese books whose prestige is so great that in the fourfold classification of Chinese writings the jing (“classics”) are placed before shi (“history”), zi (“philosophy”), and ji (“literature”) in order of importance. For 2,000 years these five classics, all associated in some

  • Five Colleges of Ohio (college consortium, Ohio, United States)

    Denison University: …Ohio Wesleyan University) of the Five Colleges of Ohio, a consortium created to consolidate library holdings and academic resources among these small liberal arts institutions.

  • Five Days One Summer (film by Zinnemann [1982])

    Fred Zinnemann: Last films: …to mount his final production, Five Days One Summer (1982), an investigation of a complex May-December romance set in 1933. It starred Sean Connery as a physician who is climbing in the Swiss Alps with a young woman who may or may not be his wife.

  • Five Displays, The (ancient Korean dance)

    Korean performing arts: Great Silla period: Masked dances called “The Five Displays” are mentioned in a Silla poetic composition of the 9th century. They included acrobatics, ball juggling, farcical pantomime, shamanistic masked dances, and the lion dance. The similarity of several of these dances to Japanese bugaku dances has been noted. Others believe “The…

  • Five Dynasties (Chinese history)

    Five Dynasties, in Chinese history, period of time between the fall of the Tang dynasty (ad 907) and the founding of the Song dynasty (960), when five would-be dynasties followed one another in quick succession in North China. The era is also known as the period of the Ten Kingdoms (Shiguo) because

  • Five Easy Pieces (film by Rafelson [1970])

    Columbia Pictures Entertainment, Inc.: …such as Easy Rider (1969), Five Easy Pieces (1970), The Last Picture Show (1971), and The Big Chill (1983).

  • Five Families (American crime syndicate)

    Five Families, moniker given to the five major Italian American Mafia families in New York City: Bonanno, Colombo, Gambino, Genovese, and Lucchese. The families and their inner workings were publicly revealed in 1963, when a Mafia soldier testified at a congressional hearing. The heyday of the Five

  • Five Fifths (ancient kingdom, Ireland)

    Ireland: Political and social organization: …of tuatha, known as the Five Fifths (Cuíg Cuígí), occurred about the beginning of the Christian era. These were Ulster (Ulaidh), Meath (Midhe), Leinster (Laighin), Munster (Mumhain), and Connaught (Connacht).

  • Five Finger Rapids (geographical feature, North America)

    Yukon River: Physiography and hydrology: …split the river into the Five Finger Rapid area, and the current flows swiftly past these islands. At the village of Selkirk, the junction of the Pelly River swells the Yukon’s volume considerably, for the Pelly drains about 19,700 square miles (51,000 square km) of the generally uninhabited western slopes…

  • Five Forks, Battle of (American Civil War [1865])

    Battle of Five Forks, one of the final major engagements of the American Civil War (1861–65). It was fought on April 1, 1865. The lengthy Union siege of Confederate-held Petersburg in Virginia, which had lasted for nine months, was brought to a close in this battle. Union troops overwhelmed their

  • Five Good Emperors (ancient Rome)

    Five Good Emperors, the ancient Roman imperial succession of Nerva (reigned 96–98 ce), Trajan (98–117), Hadrian (117–138), Antoninus Pius (138–161), and Marcus Aurelius (161–180), who presided over the most majestic days of the Roman Empire. It was not a bloodline. Nerva was raised to the

  • Five Graves to Cairo (film by Wilder [1943])

    Billy Wilder: Films of the 1940s: Wilder and Brackett’s next project, Five Graves to Cairo (1943), was a suspenseful tale of wartime espionage. It was followed by Double Indemnity (1944), one of the most searing of the early films noir and, in the eyes of many historians, the apotheosis of the genre. James M. Cain’s 1936…

  • Five Great Kings (Buddhism)

    Five Great Kings, in Tibetan Buddhism, a group of five deified heroes popularly worshiped as protection against enemies. Some accounts suggest they were five brothers who came to Tibet from northern Mongolia, and they are usually shown wearing broad-rimmed helmets. Diverse traditions exist, but

  • Five Great Political Comebacks

    Donald Trump’s win in the 2024 U.S. presidential election has been heralded as one of the greatest political comebacks of all time. He’s in good company: Richard Nixon, Winston Churchill, Napoleon, and Vladimir Lenin could all compete for that title. Trump’s ignominy is fairly straightforward. He

  • Five Guns West (film by Corman [1955])

    Roger Corman: King of the B-movies: …directed his first feature film, Five Guns West, a romantic western. The titles of many of Corman’s films of the 1950s—The Beast with a Million Eyes (1955), It Conquered the World (1956), Attack of the Crab Monsters (1957), Teenage Cave Man (1958), Night of the Blood Beast (1958), The Brain…

  • five hundred (card game)

    five hundred, card game for two to six players, devised in 1904 by the United States Playing Card Company. Though later eclipsed by bridge, it still has a substantial American following and has also become the national card game of Australia and New Zealand. Five hundred was devised as a deliberate

  • Five Hundred, Council of (ancient Greek council)

    Council of Five Hundred, boule or deliberative council in ancient Athens that comprised representatives chosen by lot (sortition) to represent citizens of the city-state. It was one component of the Athenian system of government after the reforms of Cleisthenes, which are regarded as the foundation

  • Five Hundred, Council of (French political history)

    Council of Five Hundred, lower house of the Corps Législatif, the legislative body established by France’s Constitution of 1795 (Year III of the French Revolution). It consisted of 500 delegates, who were elected by limited, indirect suffrage, and was charged with initiating legislation, which the

  • Five Kingdoms (work by Margulis and Schwartz)

    Lynn Margulis: Her 1982 book Five Kingdoms, written with American biologist Karlene V. Schwartz, articulates a five-kingdom system of classifying life on Earth—animals, plants, bacteria (prokaryotes), fungi, and protoctists. The protist kingdom, which comprises most

  • Five Knights’ case (English history)

    Darnel’s case, celebrated case in the history of the liberty of English subjects. It contributed to the enactment of the Petition of Right. In March 1627, Sir Thomas Darnel—together with four other knights, Sir John Corbet, Sir Walter Earl, Sir Edmund Hampden, and Sir John Hevingham—was arrested by

  • Five Ks (Sikh religion)

    Sikhism: Guru Gobind Singh and the founding of the Khalsa: …the wearing of the “Five Ks”—kes or kesh (uncut hair), kangha (comb), kachha (short trousers), kara (steel bracelet), and kirpan (ceremonial sword)—did not become an obligation of all Sikhs until the establishment of the Singh Sabha, a

  • Five Laws of Library Science (work by Ranganathan)

    S.R. Ranganathan: His Five Laws of Library Science (1931) was widely accepted as a definitive statement of the ideal of library service. He also drafted plans for a national and several state library systems, founded and edited several journals, and was active in numerous professional associations.

  • Five Leaves Left (album by Drake)

    Nick Drake: Drake’s debut album, Five Leaves Left (1969), which was shepherded by Fairport Convention’s renowned producer, Joe Boyd, juxtaposed gentle melodies and subtle melancholy lyrics. Featuring members of Fairport Convention and again produced by Boyd, Drake’s next album, Bryter Later (1970), revealed a more lush and buoyant sound.

  • Five Lords, Temple of (temple, Haikou, China)

    Hainan: Cultural life: The so-called Temple of Five Lords (Wugongsi) near Haikuo, which commemorates five disgraced high-ranking central government officials from Tang (618–907) and Song (960–1279) times, is also a popular destination for tourists. Among the cultural attractions of Haikou are the Hainan Provincial Museum and the Hainan Biodiversity Museum,…

  • Five Men of the Pear-Jar Room (Japanese poets)

    Ki no Tsurayuki: …five poets (later called the Five Men of the Pear-Jar Room) who in 951 compiled the Gosenshū, the second official poetic anthology.

  • Five Mile Act (British history)

    Protestantism: The Restoration (1660–85): The Five Mile Act of 1665 prohibited any ejected minister from living within five miles of a corporate town or any place where he had formerly served. Still, some Puritans did not give up the idea of “comprehension” (the idea that all ecclesiastical factions might yet…

  • Five Mouths (portals, Tokyo, Japan)

    Tokyo-Yokohama Metropolitan Area: Street patterns: …through post stations called the Five Mouths. The most important of these was Shinagawa, to the south, first of the 53 stages on the Tōkaidō (the main coastal road to Kyōto) celebrated in the woodblock prints of Hiroshige and others. It is still situated on the oldest and most important…

  • Five Nations (American Indian confederation)

    Iroquois Confederacy, confederation of five (later six) Indian tribes across upper New York state that during the 17th and 18th centuries played a strategic role in the struggle between the French and British for mastery of North America. The five original Iroquois nations were the Mohawk

  • Five Nations Championship (rugby)

    Six Nations Championship, annual rugby competition between the national teams of the six most prominent European rugby-playing countries (England, France, Ireland, Italy, Scotland, and Wales). It is the most significant international rugby competition that takes place solely in the Northern

  • Five Nations, League of (American Indian confederation)

    Iroquois Confederacy, confederation of five (later six) Indian tribes across upper New York state that during the 17th and 18th centuries played a strategic role in the struggle between the French and British for mastery of North America. The five original Iroquois nations were the Mohawk

  • Five Orchestral Songs (work by Berg)

    Alban Berg: …his student days with Schoenberg, Five Orchestral Songs. The inspiration for this composition came from postcard messages addressed to both his friends and his foes by the eccentric Viennese poet Peter Altenberg (pen name of Richard Engländer, who was known as “P.A.”). These sometimes erotic postcard texts were sufficiently nonconformist…

  • Five Particulars (United States history)

    World War I: Peace moves, March 1917–September 1918: …(July 4), and the “Five Particulars” (September 27). Most important, not least because of Germany’s deluded reliance on them in its eventual suing for peace, were the Fourteen Points: (1) open covenants of peace and the renunciation of secret diplomacy, (2) freedom of navigation on the high seas in…

  • Five Pecks of Rice, Way of the (Daoism)

    Tianshidao, great popular Daoist movement that occurred near the end of China’s Han dynasty (206 bce–220 ce) and greatly weakened the government. The Tianshidao movement became a prototype of the religiously inspired popular rebellions that were to erupt periodically throughout China for the next

  • Five Percent Nation (American revisionist movement)

    Five Percent Nation, American revisionist movement, led by Clarence 13X, which split from the Nation of Islam in 1963. The movement rejected being called a religion, preferring instead to be known as a culture and way of life. Its teachings are referred to as “Supreme Mathematics.” In the early

  • Five Pillars of Islam

    Pillars of Islam, the five duties incumbent on every Muslim: shahādah, the Muslim profession of faith; ṣalāt, or prayer, performed in a prescribed manner five times each day; zakāt, the alms tax levied to benefit the poor and the needy; ṣawm, fasting during the month of Ramadan; and hajj, the major

  • Five Points (neighborhood, Denver, Colorado, United States)

    Five Points, historic neighbourhood in Denver, Colorado, that was one of the largest African American communities in the western United States in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Five Points was founded in the 1860s as a residential suburb and was quickly populated by African Americans seeking

  • Five Precepts (Buddhism)

    sīla: …the first five precepts (pañca-sīla) at all times. Occasionally, such as during the fortnightly fast day, they may observe eight precepts (aṣṭā-sīla; the first nine, with the seventh and eight combined as one). Normally, the full 10 vows are observed only by monks or nuns, who also follow the…

  • Five Primitive Masters (work by Uhde)

    art criticism: Critical response to early avant-garde art: In Five Primitive Masters (1949), the German critic Wilhelm Uhde valorized unschooled spontaneity as the true earmark of artistic genius.

  • Five Principles (Indian history)

    India: Foreign policy: …as nonaligned, was based on Five Principles (Panch Shila): mutual respect for other nations’ territorial integrity and sovereignty; nonaggression; noninterference in internal affairs; equality and mutual benefit; and peaceful coexistence. These principles were, ironically, articulated in a treaty with China over the Tibet region in 1954, when Nehru still hoped…

  • Five Principles (Indonesian political philosophy)

    Pancasila, the Indonesian state philosophy, formulated by the Indonesian nationalist leader Sukarno. It was first articulated on June 1, 1945, in a speech delivered by Sukarno to the preparatory committee for Indonesia’s independence, which was sponsored by the Japanese during their World War II

  • five senses, offerings of the (Tibetan Buddhist rite)

    ’dod-yon sna-lnga, in Tibetan Buddhist ceremonies, pleasurable sense perceptions presented to honour tranquil deities. The offerings include a mirror (to please the sense of form, or sight); a bell or stringed musical instrument (hearing); incense, nutmeg, or scented flower (smell); sugar, a conch

  • five stages of grief

    Elisabeth Kübler-Ross: …especially known for having identified five stages of grief experienced by the dying: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. She was credited with bringing acceptance and respect to the new field of thanatology and to the hospice care movement.

  • Five Star Final (film by LeRoy [1931])

    Mervyn LeRoy: At Warner Brothers in the 1930s: Little Caesar, I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang, and Gold Diggers of 1933: However, Five Star Final (1931) again had the benefit of Robinson, this time playing a hard-boiled newspaper editor whose ethics are twisted out of shape in his pursuit of higher circulation. Local Boy Makes Good, yet another vehicle for Brown, and Tonight or Never completed LeRoy’s…

  • Five Star Movement (political party, Italy)

    Italy: Scandal and the struggling economy: in comedian Beppe Grillo’s Five Star Movement. Espousing views that were broadly populist, critical of the EU, and antiestablishment, Grillo used the Internet and social media to amass legions of followers. The protest party won victories in local elections in Parma and Sicily, as traditional parties, such as the…

  • Five Stories of Ferrara (work by Bassani)

    Giorgio Bassani: …collection Cinque storie ferraresi (1956; Five Stories of Ferrara, also published as Prospect of Ferrara; reissued as Dentro le mura, 1973, “Inside the Walls”), five novellas that describe the growth of fascism and anti-Semitism, brought Bassani his first commercial success and the Strega Prize (offered annually for the best Italian…

  • Five Ways, the (philosophy)

    the Five Ways, in the philosophy of religion, the five arguments proposed by St. Thomas Aquinas (1224/25–1274) as demonstrations of the existence of God. Aquinas developed a theological system that synthesized Western Christian (and predominantly Roman Catholic) theology with the philosophy of the

  • Five Weeks in a Balloon (novel by Verne)

    Jules Verne: …Journeys”)—Cinq semaines en ballon (1863; Five Weeks in a Balloon). Initially serialized in Hetzel’s Le Magasin d’éducation et de récréation, the novel became an international best seller, and Hetzel offered Verne a long-term contract to produce many more works of “scientific fiction.” Verne subsequently quit his job at the stock…

  • Five Women Who Loved Love (work by Ihara Saikaku)

    Five Women Who Loved Love, story collection written by Ihara Saikaku, published in Japanese in 1686 as Kōshoku gonin onna and considered a masterwork of the Tokugawa period (1603–1867). Five Women Who Loved Love is composed of five separate tales, each divided into five individually titled

  • Five Words in Green Neon (work by Kosuth)

    Joseph Kosuth: …titles of such works as Five Words in Green Neon (1965), fashioned from green neon; or to write out quotations, as in On Color (Red), After Augustine #I (1990). From 1968 he taught at the School of Visual Arts in New York, and he also taught in Germany and Italy.…

  • Five Years Meeting of Friends (religious organization)

    Friends United Meeting, international cooperative organization that unites 20 yearly meetings (regional associations) of Friends (Quakers) for fellowship and mutual projects. It was formed in the United States in 1902 as the Five Years Meeting of Friends; the name was changed in 1965. The yearly

  • Five Years’ Exploration at Thebes (work by Carter and Carnarvon)

    George Edward Stanhope Molyneux Herbert, 5th earl of Carnarvon: …and 18th dynasties, in 1912: Five Years’ Exploration at Thebes.

  • Five, Council of (European history)

    Paris Peace Conference: …continued to meet as a Council of Five dealing with secondary matters.

  • Five, Group of (international finance)

    international payment and exchange: Exchange-rate fluctuations: …senior officials of the “Group of Five” (France, West Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States) met at the Plaza Hotel in New York City in 1985. In the “Plaza Agreement,” they declared their intention to bring the dollar down to a more competitive level, if necessary…

  • Five, The (Russian composers)

    The Five, group of five Russian composers—César Cui, Aleksandr Borodin, Mily Balakirev, Modest Mussorgsky, and Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov—who in the 1860s banded together in an attempt to create a truly national school of Russian music, free of the stifling influence of Italian opera, German lieder,

  • five-and-ten store

    Woolworth Co.: …on the concept of the five-and-ten (i.e., a store that sells all items in stock for 10 cents or less). Woolworth evolved into a multinational corporation with a large collection of specialty retail stores on four continents. Its headquarters were in New York City. The company was founded by Frank…

  • Five-Anti campaign (Chinese history)

    China: Reconstruction and consolidation, 1949–52: The Five-Antis campaign was aimed at the capitalists themselves and brought them into line on charges of bribery, tax evasion, theft of state property and economic information, and cheating on government contracts. Finally, the thought-reform campaign humbled university professors and marked a turning point in the…

  • Five-Carat Soul (short stories by McBride)

    James McBride: Literary career: …soul singer; the short-story collection Five-Carat Soul (2017); and the best-selling novel and Oprah’s Book Club pick Deacon King Kong (2020), which is set in New York City in 1969.

  • five-card cribbage (card game)

    cribbage: Variants: In five-card cribbage, the original game, each player discards two cards into the crib, remaining with only three, plus starter. At the beginning of the initial hand, nondealer pegs three to offset dealer’s advantage. Game is 61.

  • five-card stud (card game)

    poker: Five-card stud: Each player receives one card facedown—his hole card—and one card faceup. The deal is then interrupted for a betting interval. There follow three rounds of dealing, each deal distributing one card faceup to each active player, with a betting interval after each round.…