- Hanseong (national capital, South Korea)
Seoul, city and capital of South Korea (the Republic of Korea). It is located on the Han River (Han-gang) in the northwestern part of the country, with the city center some 37 miles (60 km) inland from the Yellow Sea (west). Seoul is the cultural, economic, and political center of South Korea.
- Hansestadt Lübeck (Germany)
Lübeck, city and major seaport, Schleswig-Holstein Land (state), northern Germany. It is located on the Trave and Wakenitz rivers, about 9 miles (14 km) from the Baltic Sea. In the Middle Ages it was one of the main commercial centres of northern Europe and the chief city of the Hanseatic League
- Hanshin Industrial Zone (industrial area, Japan)
Ōsaka-Kōbe metropolitan area: …is called by geographers the Hanshin Industrial Zone; as a result of the expansion of the urban area along the Inland Sea and northeast toward the city of Kyōto, the region is now included in the larger Keihanshin Industrial Zone. Neither of these zones is a political entity, but the…
- Hanshin Tigers (Japanese baseball team)
Central League: …consists of the Chūnichi Dragons, Hanshin Tigers, Hiroshima Tōyō Carp, Tokyo Yakult Swallows, Yokohama BayStars, and Yomiuri (Tokyo) Giants. The regular playing season culminates in the Japan Series, a seven-game series between the respective champion teams of the Pacific and Central leagues.
- Hanshin-Awaji Daishinsai (Japan)
Kōbe earthquake of 1995, (Jan. 17, 1995) large-scale earthquake in the Ōsaka-Kōbe (Hanshin) metropolitan area of western Japan that was among the strongest, deadliest, and costliest to ever strike that country. The earthquake hit at 5:46 am on Tuesday, Jan. 17, 1995, in the southern part of Hyōgo
- Hanshu (Chinese historical work)
Ban Biao: …to have begun the famous Han shu (“Book of Han”), considered the Confucian historiographic model on which all later dynastic histories were patterned.
- Hansi (India)
Hansi, town, west-central Haryana state, northwestern India. It is situated between Hisar city (northwest) and Delhi (southeast) and is connected with both by road and rail. Hansi is an ancient town and was probably a Kushan stronghold in the 1st and 2nd centuries ce. It was captured in 1192 by
- Hanska, Éveline (Polish countess)
Honoré de Balzac: Early career: …1832 Balzac became friendly with Éveline Hanska, a Polish countess who was married to an elderly Ukrainian landowner. She, like many other women, had written to Balzac expressing admiration of his writings. They met twice in Switzerland in 1833—the second time in Geneva, where they became lovers—and again in Vienna…
- Hanslick, Eduard (Austrian music critic)
Eduard Hanslick was a celebrated Austrian music critic and a prolific author of works on music and concert life. Hanslick studied philosophy and law in Prague, received his doctorate from the University of Vienna in 1849, and taught there from 1856, becoming a regular professor in 1870. He was
- hansom cab (carriage)
hansom cab, low, two-wheeled, closed carriage patented in 1834, whose distinctive feature was the elevated driver’s seat in the rear. It was entered from the front through a folding door and had one seat above the axle with room for two passengers. The driver spoke to the passengers through a
- Hanson, Curtis (American director, producer, writer, and actor)
- Hanson, Duane (American sculptor)
Duane Hanson was an American figurative sculptor whose lifelike figures made of cast fibreglass and polyester resin and dressed in everyday clothes often fooled the public into believing that they were viewing real people. Because of its faithfulness to reality, Hanson’s work is often categorized
- Hanson, Duane Elwood (American sculptor)
Duane Hanson was an American figurative sculptor whose lifelike figures made of cast fibreglass and polyester resin and dressed in everyday clothes often fooled the public into believing that they were viewing real people. Because of its faithfulness to reality, Hanson’s work is often categorized
- Hanson, Harriet Jane (American author and leader)
Harriet Jane Hanson Robinson was a writer and woman suffrage leader in the United States. Robinson was a mill operative for the Tremont Corporation at Lowell, Mass., beginning at the age of 10 as a bobbin doffer, and she later wrote poems and prose for the Lowell Offering, the mill operatives’
- Hanson, Howard (American composer)
Howard Hanson was a composer, conductor, and teacher who promoted contemporary American music and was, in his own compositions, a principal representative of the Romantic tradition. After studying in New York, Hanson taught in San Jose, Calif., and spent three years in Italy (1921–24) as winner of
- Hanson, John (United States statesman)
John Hanson was an American Revolutionary leader and president under the U.S. Articles of Confederation. A member of the Maryland Assembly (1757–79), he represented Maryland in the Continental Congress (1780–82). On Nov. 5, 1781, he was elected by the Continental Congress “President of the United
- Hanson, Pauline Lee (Australian politician)
Pauline Lee Hanson is an Australian politician, known for her controversial views on race and immigration, who cofounded (1997) the One Nation party and served as its leader (1997–2002; 2014– ). Hanson was the mother of four when her second marriage ended in the late 1980s. She settled in Ipswich,
- Hanson, Timothy (American farmer)
timothy: …is named after American farmer Timothy Hanson, who promoted its use outside New England and among British farmers in the early 1700s.
- Hansŏng (national capital, South Korea)
Seoul, city and capital of South Korea (the Republic of Korea). It is located on the Han River (Han-gang) in the northwestern part of the country, with the city center some 37 miles (60 km) inland from the Yellow Sea (west). Seoul is the cultural, economic, and political center of South Korea.
- Hanssen, Robert (American law enforcement agent and spy)
Robert Hanssen was an agent of the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) who was one of the Soviet Union’s and Russia’s most valuable double agents and the most damaging spy ever to penetrate the FBI. Hanssen was the son of a police officer. He received a bachelor’s degree from Knox College in
- Hanssen, Robert Philip (American law enforcement agent and spy)
Robert Hanssen was an agent of the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) who was one of the Soviet Union’s and Russia’s most valuable double agents and the most damaging spy ever to penetrate the FBI. Hanssen was the son of a police officer. He received a bachelor’s degree from Knox College in
- Hansson, Ola (Swedish author)
Ola Hansson was a poet, prose writer, and critic, belatedly recognized as one of the most original of modern Swedish writers. Of peasant stock, Hansson celebrated in Dikter (1884; “Poems”) and Notturno (1885) the natural beauty and folkways of his native Skåne. The influence of contemporary
- Hansson, Per Albin (prime minister of Sweden)
Per Albin Hansson was a Social Democratic statesman who, as four-time premier of Sweden between 1932 and 1946, led the nation out of the economic depression of the early 1930s, initiated key social-welfare legislation, and helped maintain Sweden’s neutrality during World War II. A store clerk with
- Hansteen, Christopher (Norwegian astronomer)
Christopher Hansteen was a Norwegian astronomer and physicist noted for his research in geomagnetism. At the beginning of the 19th century, measurements of geomagnetic intensity had just begun. Hansteen continued the task, taking measurements in London, Paris, Finland, and (1828–30) Siberia. In
- Hanstholm (Denmark)
Vendsyssel-Thy: At Hanstholm on the North Sea, a deepwater port was opened in 1967 to accommodate fishing boats and to provide employment. Pop. (2003 est.) 306,373.
- Hanswurst (puppet character)
Joseph Anton Stranitzky: …part on his portrayal of Hanswurst, the sly, knowing, Viennese servant character he adopted and modified to provide opportunity for improvised comedy within vernacular, coarsely humorous plays called Haupt und Staatsaktionen (“chief and state plays”). Fourteen of these plays attributable to Stranitzky still exist; they reveal how he adapted opera…
- hantavirus (virus)
hantavirus, (genus Hantavirus), any member of a genus of viruses (Hantavirus) of the family Bunyaviridae that cause acute respiratory illnesses in humans. The hantaviruses are rodent-borne viruses, each of which has been evolutionarily adapted to a specific rodent host. Human infection occurs where
- Hantavirus (virus)
hantavirus, (genus Hantavirus), any member of a genus of viruses (Hantavirus) of the family Bunyaviridae that cause acute respiratory illnesses in humans. The hantaviruses are rodent-borne viruses, each of which has been evolutionarily adapted to a specific rodent host. Human infection occurs where
- hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (pathology)
hantavirus: Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome: …group of hantavirus diseases is hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS), which is recognized in a number of separate locations throughout the Western Hemisphere. HPS illnesses show a rapid onset of muscle ache and fever, leading to acute respiratory distress. These illnesses are fatal about 50 percent of the time. The first…
- Hantengri Feng (mountain, Asia)
Khan Tängiri Peak, peak in the Tien Shan range of Central Asia, at the juncture of the boundaries between Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and the Uygur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang, China. Situated in a heavily glaciated mountain knot, the mountain rises to 22,949 feet (6,995 metres) and is the highest
- Hanthawaddy kingdom (kingdom, Myanmar)
Mon kingdom, kingdom of the Mon people, who were powerful in Myanmar (Burma) from the 9th to the 11th and from the 13th to the 16th century and for a brief period in the mid-18th century. The Mon migrated southward from western China and settled in the Chao Phraya River basin (of southern Thailand)
- Hanti (people)
Khanty and Mansi, western Siberian peoples, living mainly in the Ob River basin of central Russia. They each speak an Ob-Ugric language of the Finno-Ugric branch of the Uralic languages. Together they numbered some 30,000 in the late 20th century. They are descended from people from the south Ural
- Hantilis (Hittite king)
Anatolia: The Old Hittite Kingdom: The succession of his brother-in-law Hantilis marked the beginning of the catastrophic period referred to in the Edict of Telipinus, during which the Hittite kingdom came near the verge of extinction.
- Hantsport (harbour, Nova Scotia, Canada)
Bay of Fundy: …New Brunswick and Digby and Hantsport in Nova Scotia, all harbor towns that burgeoned during the great lumbering, shipping, and shipbuilding activity of the 19th and early 20th centuries. In 1948 an 80-square-mile section of shore and stream-riven hills in New Brunswick was set aside as Fundy National Park.
- Hantzsch, Arthur Rudolf (German chemist)
Arthur Rudolf Hantzsch was a German chemist who won fame at the age of 25 for devising the synthesis of substituted pyridines. Hantzsch was a professor at Zürich (1885), Würzburg (1893), and Leipzig (1903). With his student Alfred Werner he investigated the stereochemistry of nitrogen compounds. He
- Ḥanukka (Judaism)
Hanukkah, Jewish festival that begins at sundown on Kislev 25 (usually in December, according to the Gregorian calendar) and is celebrated for eight days. Hanukkah reaffirms the ideals of Judaism and commemorates in particular the rededication of the Second Temple of Jerusalem by the lighting of
- Hanukkah (Judaism)
Hanukkah, Jewish festival that begins at sundown on Kislev 25 (usually in December, according to the Gregorian calendar) and is celebrated for eight days. Hanukkah reaffirms the ideals of Judaism and commemorates in particular the rededication of the Second Temple of Jerusalem by the lighting of
- Hanuman (Hindu mythology)
Hanuman, in Hindu mythology, the monkey commander of the monkey army. His exploits are narrated in the great Hindu Sanskrit poem the Ramayana (“Rama’s Journey”). While still a baby, Hanuman, the child of a nymph by the wind god, tried to fly up and grab the Sun, which he mistook for a fruit. Indra,
- Hanuman langur (primate)
langur: The gray, or Hanuman, langur (S. entellus) of the Indian subcontinent is almost black when newborn and gray, tan, or brown as an adult. Regarded as sacred in Hinduism, it spends a good deal of time on the ground and roams at will in villages and temples of…
- Hanumangarh (India)
Hanumangarh, city, northern Rajasthan state, northwestern India. It lies on the right bank of the Ghaggar River about 30 miles (48 km) southeast of Ganganagar. Previously called Bhatner (“The Fortress of the Bhatti Rajputs”), it became Hanumangarh in 1805 when it was annexed by the princely state
- Hanyang (national capital, South Korea)
Seoul, city and capital of South Korea (the Republic of Korea). It is located on the Han River (Han-gang) in the northwestern part of the country, with the city center some 37 miles (60 km) inland from the Yellow Sea (west). Seoul is the cultural, economic, and political center of South Korea.
- Hanyang (China)
Hanyang, large urban and industrial area, east-central Hubei sheng (province), central China. Located on the right bank of the Han River at its confluence with the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang), opposite Hankou, it is the westernmost of the three former cities (also including Wuchang) now
- Hanye zhong de xingchen (novella by Gao Xingjian)
Gao Xingjian: …the publication of the novella Hanye zhong de xingchen (1980; “Stars on a Cold Night”). In 1981 he became a resident playwright with the Beijing People’s Art Theatre, and in 1982 his first play, Juedui xinhao (Alarm Signal), written in collaboration with Liu Huiyuan, was performed. His second and most…
- Hanyeping ironworks (Chinese company)
Daye: …into a single concern, the Han-Ye-Ping Iron and Coal Company. This company experienced financial difficulties and by 1913 was entirely in the hands of its Japanese creditors.
- Hanyu pinyin wenzi (Chinese writing system)
Pinyin romanization, system of romanization for the Chinese written language based on the pronunciation of the Beijing dialect of Mandarin Chinese. The gradual acceptance of Pinyin as the official transcription used in the People’s Republic of China signaled a commitment to promote the use of the
- Hanyu Yuzuru (Japanese figure skater)
Hanyu Yuzuru is a Japanese figure skater who at the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, Russia, became the first Japanese man to win an Olympic gold medal in figure skating. He added a second Olympic gold four years later at the 2018 Winter Games in P’yŏngch’ang, South Korea. (Read Scott Hamilton’s
- hanzei (Japanese tax)
Japan: Muromachi government structure: This was called the equal tax division, or hanzei. Many shugo succeeded to their domains by inheritance, and in cases such as that of the Yamana family a single shugo sometimes held a number of provinces. If the primary agent of the Kamakura bakufu had been the jitō, the…
- Hanzhong (China)
Hanzhong, city, southwestern Shaanxi sheng (province), central China. It is situated in a long, narrow, and fertile basin along the Han River, between the Qin (Tsinling) and Micang mountain ranges. To the north one of the few routes across the Qin Mountains joins it to Baoji in Shaanxi, while
- Hao Ran (Chinese writer)
Chinese literature: 1949–76: …and the revolutionary-romantic novels of Hao Ran. After the death of Mao and the fall of the Gang of Four, literature made a comeback and most surviving writers were rehabilitated, although the progress was as rocky as the political scene Chinese literature continued to reflect.
- Hao-pi (China)
Hebi, prefecture-level city, northern Henan sheng (province), China. Once a county seat in Anyang prefecture, Hebi is situated in the foothills of the southern Taihang Mountains, some 16 miles (25 km) southwest of Anyang. Until the early 1950s Hebi was little more than a local market town, but the
- haofang school (Chinese literature)
Su Shi: …as the founder of the haofang (“heroic abandon”) school of writing. The optimism Su demonstrated in his private and political life can be seen also in his poems, many of which vividly describe his own experiences.
- haoma (Zoroastrianism)
haoma, in Zoroastrianism, sacred plant and the drink made from it. The preparation of the drink from the plant by pounding and the drinking of it are central features of Zoroastrian ritual. Haoma is also personified as a divinity. It bestows essential vital qualities—health, fertility, husbands for
- Haora (India)
Haora, city, east-central West Bengal state, northeastern India. It lies along the west bank of the Hugli (Hooghly) River directly opposite Kolkata (Calcutta). Haora is Kolkata’s largest satellite city and is the second largest city in West Bengal state. Haora has major Grand Trunk Road connections
- haori (clothing)
dress: Japan: …together with the short black haori coat, was until fairly recently the approved formal attire for Japanese men.
- Hap (Egyptian god)
Apis, in ancient Egyptian religion, sacred bull deity worshipped at Memphis. The cult of Apis originated at least as early as the 1st dynasty (c. 2925–c. 2775 bce). Like other bull deities, Apis was probably at first a fertility god concerned with the propagation of grain and herds, but he became
- Hapalemur (primate)
lemur: Lemur diversity: The gentle lemurs, or lesser bamboo lemurs (genus Hapalemur), and the highly endangered greater bamboo lemurs (Prolemur simus) feed on bamboo stems in the eastern and northwestern rainforests of the island.
- Hapalocarcinidae (crustacean)
crab: Distribution and variety: …food; another example is the coral-gall crab (Hapalocarcinidae), which irritates the growing tips of certain corals so that they grow to enclose the female in a stony prison. Many of the sluggish spider crabs (Majidae) cover their shells with growing seaweeds, zoophytes, and sponges, which afford them a very effective…
- Hapanzi (folklore character)
Ananse, name given to an Akan character who has become famous throughout Africa, the countries in the Caribbean region, and beyond because of his insight, intelligence, and wisdom. He is one of the most-important figures in the pantheon of cultural icons among West Africans. Along with his wife,
- Hape (Egyptian god)
Apis, in ancient Egyptian religion, sacred bull deity worshipped at Memphis. The cult of Apis originated at least as early as the 1st dynasty (c. 2925–c. 2775 bce). Like other bull deities, Apis was probably at first a fertility god concerned with the propagation of grain and herds, but he became
- HAPE (pathology)
altitude sickness: …serious type of altitude sickness, high altitude pulmonary edema (HAPE), occurs rarely among newcomers to altitude but more often affects those who have already become acclimated to high elevations and are returning after several days at sea level. In pulmonary edema, fluid accumulates in the lungs and prevents the victim…
- Hapgood, Isabel Florence (American translator)
Isabel Florence Hapgood was an American translator and writer, noted for making many classic Russian works available to an English-language audience for the first time. Hapgood studied foreign languages independently when her formal education ended in 1868, after three years at Miss Porter’s School
- Haphṭarah (Judaism)
Hafṭarah, selective reading from Old Testament prophets recited in Jewish synagogues during the morning service on the sabbath and on festivals (but during the afternoon service on fast days). Though Haftarot vary with various rites and no longer follow recommendations of the Mishna (the lawbook
- Haphṭorah (Judaism)
Hafṭarah, selective reading from Old Testament prophets recited in Jewish synagogues during the morning service on the sabbath and on festivals (but during the afternoon service on fast days). Though Haftarot vary with various rites and no longer follow recommendations of the Mishna (the lawbook
- Hapi (Egyptian god of the inundation)
Hapi, in ancient Egyptian religion, personification of the annual inundation of the Nile River. Hapi was the most important among numerous personifications of aspects of natural fertility, and his dominance increased during Egyptian history. Hymns were composed in his honour, but he had no temples
- Hapi (Egyptian god)
Apis, in ancient Egyptian religion, sacred bull deity worshipped at Memphis. The cult of Apis originated at least as early as the 1st dynasty (c. 2925–c. 2775 bce). Like other bull deities, Apis was probably at first a fertility god concerned with the propagation of grain and herds, but he became
- Hapiru (people)
Moses: The date of Moses: …Habiru, a variant spelling of Ḫapiru (Apiru), a designation of a class of people who made their living by hiring themselves out for various services. The biblical Hebrews had been in Egypt for generations, but apparently they became a threat, so one of the pharaohs enslaved them. Unfortunately, the personal…
- hapkido (martial art)
hapkido, a Korean form of unarmed self-defense based on the circular foot sweeps and kicks of traditional Korean tae kyon but incorporating punches and circular throws and a yielding principle similar to that of aikido. The emphasis on circular motion allows for a free-flowing form of combat in
- Haplochromis (fish genus)
mimicry: Mimicry within species: …cichlid fish of the genus Haplochromis. The female takes the eggs into her mouth immediately after they are laid, even before the male can fertilize them. The male, however, carries conspicuous yellow or orange spots near the base of the anal fin, which closely resemble the eggs of the particular…
- haplodiploidy (genetics)
animal social behaviour: Social interactions involving cooperative breeding and eusociality: …a bizarre genetic system called haplodiploidy.
- haplography (writing)
biblical literature: Problems visual in origin: Haplography, the accidental omission of a letter or word that occurs twice in close proximity, can be found, for example, in the Dead Sea Scroll text of Isaiah.
- haploid genotype (biology)
International HapMap Project: … through the development of a haplotype (haploid genotype) map of the human genome. A haplotype is a set of alleles (differing forms of genes) that occur close together on a single chromosome and tend to be inherited together. By identifying haplotypes and mapping their chromosomal locations, scientists are able to…
- haploid parthenogenesis (biology)
animal reproductive system: Parthenogenesis: …develop into haploid males (haploid parthenogenesis), which then participate in bisexual reproduction. Bisexually produced eggs are often referred to as winter eggs since they have a thick covering that protects the embryo during adverse environmental conditions. Summer eggs, produced parthenogenetically, are thin shelled. Bisexual reproduction occurs, therefore, only often…
- haploid phase (biology)
algae: Reproduction and life histories: …of chromosomes and is called haploid, whereas in the second stage each cell has two sets of chromosomes and is called diploid. When one haploid gamete fuses with another haploid gamete during fertilization, the resulting combination, with two sets of chromosomes, is called a zygote. Either immediately or at some…
- haploidy (genetics)
ploidy: This condition is called haploidy. When two germ cells (e.g., egg and sperm) unite, the diploid condition is restored.
- haplology (linguistics)
linguistics: Sound change: …special case of dissimilation is haplology, in which the second of the two identical or similar syllables is dropped. Examples include the standard modern British pronunciations of “Worcester” and “Gloucester” with two syllables rather than three and the common pronunciation of “library” as if it were written “libry.” Both assimilation…
- Haplomitriales (plant order)
bryophyte: Annotated classification: Order Haplomitriales (formerly Calobryales) Leaves flattened and in three rows on an erect shoot arising from a colourless, subterranean, rootlike system that lacks rhizoids; sex organs lateral but near shoot apices; sporophytes with elongate seta; sporangium elongate, with elaters and thickenings on the jacket cell walls;…
- Haplomitrium (plant genus)
bryophyte: Annotated classification: …Indo-Malayan region; 1 extant genus, Haplomitrium. Order Metzgeriales Thallose, with the thallus mainly of uniformly thickened cell walls, usually reclining but sometimes erect; branching varies from forked to regularly pinnate or irregular; smooth rhizoids on the undersurface; sex organs lateral; sporophytes with elongate seta; sporangia spherical to elongate, with elaters…
- Haplophyllum (plant genus)
Sapindales: Distribution and abundance: Haplophyllum (about 70 species) occurs from the Mediterranean region to eastern Siberia.
- Haplopoda (crustacean)
branchiopod: Annotated classification: Infraorder Haplopoda Contains only 1 genus, Leptodora, a plankton feeder; carapace reduced to a dorsal brood pouch; large antennae with more than 20 swimming setae; 6 pairs of grasping trunk limbs; head elongated with small, complex eye; transparent except for eye; young develop into miniatures of…
- Haplorrhini (primate suborder)
primate: Classification: Suborder Haplorrhini 2 infraorders of 9 living families containing 41 living genera; 8 fossil families contain about 50 fossil genera dating to the Eocene. Infraorder Tarsiiformes 1 living family; included here are the Eocene to Early Miocene families Anaptomorphidae and Omomyidae. Family Tarsiidae
- Haplosporea (organism)
haplosporidian, any protozoan of the sporozoan subclass Haplosporea. They are internal parasites of invertebrates and lower vertebrates. Representative genera are Ichthyosporidium in fish, Coelosporidium in cockroaches, and the type genus Haplosporidium in annelids and other invertebrates.
- haplosporidian (organism)
haplosporidian, any protozoan of the sporozoan subclass Haplosporea. They are internal parasites of invertebrates and lower vertebrates. Representative genera are Ichthyosporidium in fish, Coelosporidium in cockroaches, and the type genus Haplosporidium in annelids and other invertebrates.
- Haplotaxida (oligochaete order)
annelid: Annotated classification: Order Haplotaxida Chiefly aquatic worms; male gonopores in segment immediately behind testes; seminal receptacle at or near segment containing testes; size, minute to 1–3 cm; examples of genera: Nais, Tubifex (sludge worm). Class Hirudinea (leeches)
- Haplotaxis (oligochaete genus)
annelid: Annotated classification: …30–40 cm; examples of genera: Haplotaxis, Eisenia, Lumbricus (earthworm), Megascolides. Order Moniligastrida Male gonopores, 1 or 2 pairs on segment posterior to testes; clitellum 1 cell thick; 4 pairs of setae per segment; size, minute to 3 m; examples of genera:
- haplotype (biology)
International HapMap Project: … through the development of a haplotype (haploid genotype) map of the human genome. A haplotype is a set of alleles (differing forms of genes) that occur close together on a single chromosome and tend to be inherited together. By identifying haplotypes and mapping their chromosomal locations, scientists are able to…
- Haploxylon (pine subgenus)
pine: …Pinus to contain two subgenera: Haploxylon, or soft pines, which have one fibrovascular bundle, and Diploxylon, or hard pines, which have two.
- Happe-Chair (work by Lemonnier)
Camille Lemonnier: Happe-Chair (1886), composed before but published after Zola’s Germinal, deals with the life of drudgery led by mill workers. Later, in the work of his middle period, Lemonnier turned to psychological analysis, condemning the conservative tendencies of the bourgeoisie. He then developed a mystical naturalism,…
- Happening (novel by Ernaux)
Annie Ernaux: Film adaptations and Nobel Prize: Her work has been adapted to several award-winning films, including L’Evénement (2021; Happening), which won the Golden Lion at the 2021 Venice Film Festival.
- Happening (art event)
Happening, event that combined elements of painting, poetry, music, dance, and theatre and staged them as a live action. The term Happening was coined by the American artist Allan Kaprow in the 1950s. The nature of Happenings was influenced by Italian Futurist performance, where the convention of
- Happening, The (film by Shyamalan [2008])
M. Night Shyamalan: …Lady in the Water (2006), The Happening (2008), The Last Airbender (2010), and After Earth (2013), were widely panned by critics. However, he was able to reestablish his reputation for good storytelling and compelling character development in The Visit (2015) and Split (2016), the latter being a sequel to Unbreakable.
- Happening, The (film by Silverstein [1967])
Faye Dunaway: …as her first two movies, The Happening and Hurry Sundown, were released early in 1967.
- Happenings Ten Years Time Ago (song by the Yardbirds)
the Yardbirds: …one single, the visionary “Happenings Ten Years Time Ago” (1966), before the band’s short-lived final lineup dissolved in 1968. The Yardbirds were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1992.
- Happenstance (novel by Shields)
Carol Shields: In Happenstance (1980) and A Fairly Conventional Woman (1982), Shields used overlapping narratives to escape the strictures of straightforward narrative told from a single perspective. Marketed in Canada as a crime drama, Swann: A Mystery (1987) is both a sly comedy of manners and a psychological…
- Happier than Ever (album by Eilish)
Billie Eilish: When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? and Happier than Ever: …released her second studio album, Happier than Ever, which was noted for its confessional songs, a number of which deal with the downside of her celebrity.
- Happiest Season (film by DuVall [2020])
Aubrey Plaza: Emily the Criminal and The White Lotus: …Mackenzie Davis in Clea DuVall’s Happiest Season, a comedy about two women struggling with their romantic relationship over the holidays. She then starred opposite Michael Caine in Best Sellers (2021) and played the titular role in Emily the Criminal (2022), about a young woman who turns to scamming to pay…
- Happiness (film by Varda [1964])
Agnès Varda: …Varda directed Le Bonheur (Happiness), an abstract picture of happiness and fidelity that was to be her most controversial film. Les Creatures (The Creatures) was released in 1966, and her most popular films of the next two decades were L’Une chante, l’autre pas (1977; One Sings, the Other Doesn’t)…
- happiness
happiness, in psychology, a state of emotional well-being that a person experiences either in a narrow sense, when good things happen in a specific moment, or more broadly, as a positive evaluation of one’s life and accomplishments overall—that is, subjective well-being. Happiness can be
- Happiness Begins (album by the Jonas Brothers)
Jonas Brothers: …100 chart, and the album Happiness Begins (2019) topped the albums chart. Its popularity was aided by the release of the biographical documentary Chasing Happiness (2019).
- Happiness Is a Warm Gun (song by Lennon and McCartney)
Pipilotti Rist: …altered line from a Beatles song. By the late 1980s she was producing vivid and slickly made videos. In the 1990s she exhibited at a number of major venues, including the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago, the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, and the National Gallery in Berlin. In 1998…
- Happiness, Sea of (lake, Japan)
Lake Chūzenji, lake, lying within Nikkō National Park, Tochigi ken (prefecture), north-central Honshu, Japan. It is situated at an elevation of 4,163 feet (1,269 metres) and has a surface area of about 4.6 square miles (11.8 square km). Lake Chūzenji is a resort site noted for its shrines,