- Lü-shun (former city, Dalian, China)
Lüshun, former city and naval port, southern Liaoning sheng (province), northeastern China. In 1950 it was amalgamated with nearby Dalian to form the city of Lüda. In 1981, when Lüda was renamed Dalian, it became a district (under the name Lüshunkou) of the newly named
- Lü-tsung (Buddhism)
Ritsu, school of Buddhist moral discipline primarily concerned with vinaya, or the rules of monastic and religious practice. The school was founded in China in the 7th century by the monk Tao-hsüan on the basis of Theravāda texts that emphasized the letter of the law, as compared with the later
- Lu-Wang school (Chinese philosophy)
Lu Jiuyuan: …Learning of the Heart-and-Mind (xinxue), often called the Lu-Wang school, after its two great proponents. It was opposed to the other great (and dominant) school, the Learning of Principle (lixue), often called the Cheng-Zhu school after its leading philosophers, Cheng Yi and Zhu Xi.
- Lua (people)
Thailand: Mon-Khmer: The Lua, for instance, speak Lawa, an Austroasiatic language, possibly of the Mon-Khmer subfamily. According to some historians, these people inhabited the delta plain until they were driven into the hills by the invading Tai speakers.
- luakini heiau (ancient Hawaiian religious site)
Hawaii: …the site of the first luakini heiau (a ceremonial structure used for worship and for human sacrifice). There too, centuries later, Kamehameha I, who is considered one of the greatest Hawaiian kings, came to power and established a dynasty. Captain James Cook visited in 1778, and he died on the…
- Lualaba River (river, Democratic Republic of the Congo)
Lualaba River, headstream of the Congo River. Its 1,100-mile (1,800-kilometre) course lies entirely within Congo (Kinshasa), central Africa. It rises on the Katanga (Shaba) plateau at about 4,600 feet (1,400 m), near Musofi, Congo. Its upper course descends to the Manika Plateau and is marked by
- Luan He (river, China)
Luan River, river in Hebei province, northern China. The Luan rises in northern Hebei and flows northward into the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region through steep gorges; in its headstream it is called the Shandian River. It passes north of the ancient Mongol capital of Shangdu (Kaiping), for which
- Luan Ho (river, China)
Luan River, river in Hebei province, northern China. The Luan rises in northern Hebei and flows northward into the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region through steep gorges; in its headstream it is called the Shandian River. It passes north of the ancient Mongol capital of Shangdu (Kaiping), for which
- Luan River (river, China)
Luan River, river in Hebei province, northern China. The Luan rises in northern Hebei and flows northward into the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region through steep gorges; in its headstream it is called the Shandian River. It passes north of the ancient Mongol capital of Shangdu (Kaiping), for which
- Luanda (national capital, Angola)
Luanda, city, capital of Angola. Located on the Atlantic coast of northern Angola, it is the country’s largest city and one of its busiest seaports. Founded in 1576 by Paulo Dias de Novais and initially settled by the Portuguese, Luanda became the administrative centre of the Portuguese colony of
- Luanda Railway (railway, Angola)
Angola: Railways: The Luanda Railway, which was nationalized in 1918, depended on coffee and cotton for its traffic. The Namibe Railway, which has been owned by the state from the outset, depended on the shipment of iron ore. Both railways have functioned only episodically since independence, owing to…
- Luang Lake (lagoon, Gulf of Thailand)
Luang Lake, coastal lake or lagoon (thale), southern Thailand, on the east coast of the Malay Peninsula. The lake, 50 miles (80 km) long and up to 15 miles (24 km) wide, is dotted with islands. It is a fertile fishing ground and is connected to the Gulf of Thailand at Songkhla town on its southern
- Luang Prabang (Laos)
Louangphrabang, town, northern Laos. A port on the Mekong River, Louangphrabang lies 130 miles (210 km) north-northwest of Vientiane, the national capital. From 1353 Louangphrabang, then called Muong Swa, was the capital of the kingdom of Lan Xang. Around 1563 the royal court was removed to
- Luang Prabang, kingdom of (historical state, Laos)
Siribunyasan: …the Burmese attacked his rival Luang Prabang, Vientiane troops assisted the Burmese.
- Luang Pradist Manudharm (Thai political leader)
Pridi Phanomyong was a Thai political leader who was one of the instigators of the June 1932 constitutional revolution and was made prime minister in 1946. After studies at the Royal Law School, Pridi won a government scholarship to study law in France; he earned a doctorate in law from Paris in
- Luangwa National Park (park, Zambia)
Luangwa National Park, park located in northeastern Zambia, southern Africa. Divided into two separate parks, one north and one south, the Luangwa National Park covers an area of 6,000 square miles (15,540 square km) and lies at an elevation varying from about 1,600 to 3,600 feet (500 to 1,100
- Luangwa River (river, East Africa)
Luangwa River, river rising on the Malawi–Zambia border, southern Africa. From its source near Isoka, Zambia, it flows 500 miles (800 km) south-southwest, skirting the Muchinga Mountains to join the Zambezi River between Luangwa (formerly Feira), Zambia, and Zumbo, Mozambique. The river valley is
- Luanshya (Zambia)
Luanshya, municipality, north-central Zambia, south-central Africa. Known as “the garden town of the copper belt,” Luanshya is the service centre for the adjacent Roan Antelope mine. The terminus of a rail branch from Ndola (21 miles [34 km] northeast), Luanshya is also connected by road to other
- Luapula River (river, Zambia)
Luapula River, river in south-central Africa, rising in the Bangweulu Swamps (one of the world’s largest wetlands) lying east of Lake Bangweulu in eastern Zambia. For most of its 350-mile (560-kilometre) course the river forms part of the boundary between Zambia and Congo (Kinshasa). The Luapula
- Luarca (town, Spain)
Luarca, town, northwestern Asturias provincia (province) and comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), northwestern Spain. It lies on the Bay of Biscay at the mouth of the Negro River. Fishing, fish processing, and metalworking are the main occupations. Iron is mined in the vicinity. Local beaches
- luau (banquet)
luau, a modern Hawaiian banquet. The word luau originally denoted only the leaves of the taro plant, which are eaten as a vegetable; it came to refer to the dishes prepared with the leaves and then to the feasts at which the dishes were eaten. Today the term designates the modern informal feast, as
- luba (Oromo social class)
Ethiopia: Challenge, revival, and decline (16th–19th century): The warrior classes (luba) raided and rustled in order to prove themselves, and in the 16th century they began to undertake long-distance expeditions, availing themselves of the collapse of the frontier defenses of both the Christian and Muslim states. By 1600 the Oromo had spread so widely in…
- Luba (Equatorial Guinea)
Equatorial Guinea: Settlement patterns: …importance on the island is Luba, on the southwest coast; it is linked with the capital by a paved road that runs through a series of Bubi settlements. Basilé, on the slopes of Santa Isabel Peak, provides a cool refuge for heat-weary residents of the capital.
- Luba (people)
Luba, a Bantu-speaking cluster of peoples who inhabit a wide area extending throughout much of south-central Democratic Republic of the Congo. They numbered about 5,594,000 in the late 20th century. The name Luba applies to a variety of peoples who, though of different origins, speak closely
- Luba Empire (historical empire, Africa)
Luba-Lunda states, a complex of states that flourished in Central Africa (in the present-day Democratic Republic of the Congo) from the late 15th to the late 19th century. The Luba state was situated east of the Kasai River around the headwaters of the Lualaba River, and the Lunda state east of the
- Luba literature
Luba: Luba literature, including epic cycles, is well developed. The renowned Luba genesis story articulates a distinction between two types of Luba emperors whose forms of government were shaped by their own moral character and private behaviour: Nkongolo Mwamba, the red king, and Ilunga Mbidi Kiluwe,…
- Luba-Bambo (people)
Luba: …the Luba-Shankaji of Katanga, the Luba-Bambo of Kasai, and the Luba-Hemba of northern Katanga and southern Kivu. All are historically, linguistically, and culturally linked with other Congo peoples. The Shankaji branch is also connected with the early founders of the Lunda empire.
- Luba-Hemba (people)
Luba: …Luba-Bambo of Kasai, and the Luba-Hemba of northern Katanga and southern Kivu. All are historically, linguistically, and culturally linked with other Congo peoples. The Shankaji branch is also connected with the early founders of the Lunda empire.
- Luba-Lunda states (historical empire, Africa)
Luba-Lunda states, a complex of states that flourished in Central Africa (in the present-day Democratic Republic of the Congo) from the late 15th to the late 19th century. The Luba state was situated east of the Kasai River around the headwaters of the Lualaba River, and the Lunda state east of the
- Luba-Shankaji (people)
Luba: …subdivisions may be recognized: the Luba-Shankaji of Katanga, the Luba-Bambo of Kasai, and the Luba-Hemba of northern Katanga and southern Kivu. All are historically, linguistically, and culturally linked with other Congo peoples. The Shankaji branch is also connected with the early founders of the Lunda empire.
- Lubaantun (ancient city, Central America)
Maya Mountains: …leaving great centres, such as Lubaantun on the mountains’ southeastern periphery, deserted behind them.
- Lubale (people)
Luvale, Bantu-speaking people of northwestern Zambia and southeastern Angola. In terms of history, language, material culture, and religion, the Luvale are closely related to the Lunda and Ndembu to the northeast, who extend northward into southern Congo (Kinshasa). They are also culturally similar
- Lubalin, Herb (American graphic designer)
graphic design: Postwar graphic design in the United States: American Herb Lubalin is notable among the designers who embraced the new flexibility phototype made possible for designers. Type could be set in any size, the spaces between letters and lines could be compressed, and letters could be expanded, condensed, touched, overlapped, or slanted. Lubalin’s ability…
- Lubanga Dyilo, Thomas (Congolese militia leader)
International Criminal Court: …charges should be brought against Thomas Lubanga, who was accused of recruiting child soldiers in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Lubanga’s trial, the first conducted by the ICC, began in January 2009, and in March 2012 the court found him guilty and later imposed a 14-year prison sentence.
- Lubango (Angola)
Lubango, city, southwestern Angola, about 100 miles (160 km) east of Moçâmedes (formerly Namibe), to which it is linked by rail. The city was originally established in 1885 as a settlement for colonists from the Madeira Islands. It lies at an elevation of 5,774 feet (1,760 metres) in a valley of
- Lubbe, Marinus van der (Dutch arsonist)
Reichstag fire: …supposed arsonist was a Dutchman, Marinus van der Lubbe, whom some have claimed was brought to the scene of the crime by Nazi agents. Others have contended that there was no proof of Nazi complicity in the crime, but that Hitler merely capitalized on van der Lubbe’s independent act. The…
- lubber grasshopper (insect)
short-horned grasshopper: Major genera and species: In North America the eastern lubber grasshopper (Romalea microptera) is 5–7 cm long and has large red wings bordered in black. The western lubber grasshopper (Brachystola magna), also called the buffalo grasshopper because of its size, has much smaller, pinkish wings. The slender grasshopper (Leptysma marginicollis), found in the southern…
- lubber’s line
navigation: The liquid magnetic compass: …with the aid of the lubber’s line, which is oriented toward the forward part of the compass to indicate the direction of the ship’s centre line.
- Lubbertszoon, Meyndert (Dutch painter)
Meindert Hobbema was a Dutch painter, one of the most important Baroque landscapists of the Dutch school. He lived all his life in Amsterdam, adopting the surname of Hobbema as a young man. He was a friend and pupil of Jacob van Ruisdael. The two made sketching tours together and often painted the
- Lubbock (Texas, United States)
Lubbock, city, seat (1891) of Lubbock county, northwestern Texas, U.S., lying some 120 miles (190 km) south of Amarillo. It is the commercial hub of the South Plains. Formed in 1890 from Old Lubbock and Monterey and named for Col. Tom S. Lubbock, a signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence,
- Lubbock Christian University (Lubbock, Texas, United States)
Lubbock: …Center on its campus, and Lubbock Christian University (1957). The Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center and other modern hospitals have made Lubbock a regional hub for medical care. Mackenzie State Park and Buffalo Lakes provide recreational facilities. The Lubbock Lake National Historic and State Archeological Landmark, north of the…
- Lubbock, John, 1st Baron Avebury (British banker, politician, and naturalist)
John Lubbock, 1st Baron Avebury was a banker, influential Liberal-Unionist politician, and naturalist who successfully promoted about a dozen measures of some importance in Parliament but was perhaps best known for his books on archaeology and entomology. He became a partner in his father’s bank at
- Lubbock, Sir John (British banker, politician, and naturalist)
John Lubbock, 1st Baron Avebury was a banker, influential Liberal-Unionist politician, and naturalist who successfully promoted about a dozen measures of some importance in Parliament but was perhaps best known for his books on archaeology and entomology. He became a partner in his father’s bank at
- Lubec (Maine, United States)
Lubec, town, Washington county, eastern Maine, U.S. It lies along the Atlantic coast just south of Eastport. The town includes the communities of Lubec, North Lubec, South Lubec, and West Lubec. Settled about 1780, it was part of Eastport until separately incorporated in 1811. It was named for
- 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
- Lübeck, laws of
Hanseatic League: Merging of the associations: …towns having the “law of Lübeck” had agreed on common legislation for the defense of merchants and their goods. Strong in their control of the Baltic trade, Lübeck, Danzig, Riga, and their satellites forced their way into the west. They entered areas where Rhineland merchants had formerly been dominant, secured…
- Lübeck, Peace of (Europe [1629])
Thirty Years’ War: Christian’s defeat and the Peace of Lübeck in 1629 finished Denmark as a European power, but Sweden’s Gustav II Adolf, having ended a four-year war with Poland, invaded Germany and won many German princes to his anti-Roman Catholic, anti-imperial cause.
- Lubecki, Ksawery Drucki (Polish statesman)
Ksawery Drucki Lubecki was a Polish statesman who restored the finances of the remnant of Poland that was constituted as the “Congress Kingdom” under the tsar of Russia after the Napoleonic Wars. A member of a princely family descended from the ancient Russian ruling house of Rurik, Lubecki began
- Lubelska Uplands (region, Poland)
Poland: The Little Poland Uplands: …Vistula, beyond which lie the Lublin (Lubelska) Uplands. In the south occur patches of loess on which fertile brown- and black-earth soils have developed.
- Lubelska, Wyżyna (region, Poland)
Poland: The Little Poland Uplands: …Vistula, beyond which lie the Lublin (Lubelska) Uplands. In the south occur patches of loess on which fertile brown- and black-earth soils have developed.
- Lubelskie (province, Poland)
Lubelskie, województwo (province), eastern Poland. It is bordered by the provinces of Mazowieckie to the northwest, Podlaskie to the north, Podkarpackie to the south, and Świętokrzyskie to the west as well as by the countries of Belarus and Ukraine to the east. It was created in 1999 when Poland’s
- Lüber, Thomas (Swiss physician and theologian)
Thomas Erastus was a Swiss physician and religious controversialist whose name is preserved in Erastianism, a doctrine of church-state relationship that he himself never taught. A student of philosophy and medicine for nine years, Erastus was invited in 1557 by the elector Otto Heinrich of the
- Lubiana (national capital, Slovenia)
Ljubljana, capital city and economic, political, and cultural centre of Slovenia, located on the Ljubljanica River. The city lies in central Slovenia in a natural depression surrounded by high peaks of the Julian Alps. A walled Roman encampment was built there in the mid-1st century bce by Roman
- Lubianiker, Pinchas (Israeli politician)
Pinhas Lavon was an Israeli politician who held a number of government posts and was accused in 1954 of involvement in a plot to discredit Egypt by secretly attacking U.S. facilities in that country. Although he was cleared of all charges, the “Lavon Affair,” as it came to be known, effectively
- Lubianiker, Pinhas (Israeli politician)
Pinhas Lavon was an Israeli politician who held a number of government posts and was accused in 1954 of involvement in a plot to discredit Egypt by secretly attacking U.S. facilities in that country. Although he was cleared of all charges, the “Lavon Affair,” as it came to be known, effectively
- Lubilash River (river, Democratic Republic of the Congo)
Sankuru River, main tributary of the Kasai River (itself a tributary of the Congo River) in Congo (Kinshasa), central Africa. About 750 miles (1,200 km) long, it begins in the western highlands of Katanga (Shaba), where it is known as the Lubilash River, and flows 285 miles (460 km) north and
- Lubin (China)
Manzhouli, city in the Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region, China. It is situated on the border opposite the Russian town of Zabaykalsk and lies 100 miles (160 km) west of Hailar and 20 miles (32 km) northwest of Lake Hulun. Manzhouli was long a small Mongolian settlement in the Hulun Buir League. It
- Lubin, David (American agriculturalist)
David Lubin was a Polish-born American merchant and agricultural reformer whose activities led to the founding (1905) of the International Institute of Agriculture as a world clearinghouse for data on crops, prices, and trade to protect the common interests of farmers of all nations. Migrating with
- Lubitsch, Ernst (American director)
Ernst Lubitsch was a German-born American motion-picture director who was best known for sophisticated comedies of manners and romantic comedies. Lubitsch was an anomaly as an active director who also served as the head of production at a major studio, as he did briefly at Paramount. While the
- Lübke, Heinrich (German statesman)
Heinrich Lübke was a politician who served as president of the German Federal Republic (1959–69). After serving in World War I he was able to unify many small German farmers’ organizations into the German Farmers Federation, serving as the federation’s director from 1926 to 1933. Politically
- Lublin (Poland)
Lublin, city, capital of Lubelskie województwo (province), eastern Poland, on the Bystrzyca River. Founded as a stronghold in the late 9th century, the settlement grew up around the castle and received town rights in 1317. It served as a joint meeting ground for Poland and Lithuania, and in 1569
- Lublin Committee (Polish history)
20th-century international relations: The final Allied agreements: …that he would reorganize the Lublin Committee and permit free elections among “non-Fascist elements” within a month after peace. But Stalin reserved the right to decide who was “Fascist” and rejected international supervision of the elections. Roosevelt proposed a Declaration on Liberated Europe, by which the Big Three promised to…
- Lublin Uplands (region, Poland)
Poland: The Little Poland Uplands: …Vistula, beyond which lie the Lublin (Lubelska) Uplands. In the south occur patches of loess on which fertile brown- and black-earth soils have developed.
- Lublin, Union of (Poland-Lithuania [1569])
Union of Lublin, (1569), pact between Poland and Lithuania that united the two countries into a single state. After 1385 (in the Union of Krewo) the two countries had been under the same sovereign. But Sigismund II Augustus had no heirs; and the Poles, fearing that when he died the personal union
- Lublin-Majdanek (concentration camp, Poland)
Majdanek, Nazi German concentration camp and extermination camp on the southeastern outskirts of the city of Lublin, Poland. In October 1941 it received its first prisoners, mainly Soviet prisoners of war, virtually all of whom died of hunger and exposure. Within a year, however, it was converted
- Lubnān
Lebanon, country consisting of a narrow strip of territory on the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea. It is one of the world’s smaller sovereign states. The capital is Beirut. Though Lebanon, particularly its coastal region, was the site of some of the oldest human settlements in the world—the
- Lubnān ash-Sharqī (mountains, Asia)
Anti-Lebanon Mountains, mountain range that runs northeast-southwest along the Syrian-Lebanese border parallel to the Lebanon Mountains, from which they are separated by the al-Biqāʿ Valley. The range averages 6,500 feet (2,000 m) above sea level, with several peaks exceeding 8,000 feet (2,400 m).
- Lubnān, Jabal (mountain range, Lebanon)
Lebanon Mountains, mountain range, extending almost the entire length of Lebanon, paralleling the Mediterranean coast for about 150 miles (240 km), with northern outliers extending into Syria. The northern section, north of the saddle, or pass, of Ḍahr al-Baydar (through which the Beirut–Damascus
- Lubni (Ukraine)
Lubny, city and port, east-central Ukraine, on the Sula River. Lubny was established in the late 10th century as a fortified Rus town. It was destroyed by the Mongols in 1239 and was not rebuilt until the 16th century. From the mid-17th century to 1781, it was a regimental centre in the
- Lubny (Ukraine)
Lubny, city and port, east-central Ukraine, on the Sula River. Lubny was established in the late 10th century as a fortified Rus town. It was destroyed by the Mongols in 1239 and was not rebuilt until the 16th century. From the mid-17th century to 1781, it was a regimental centre in the
- Lubombo Hills (mountains, Africa)
Lebombo Mountains, long, narrow mountain range in South Africa, Swaziland, and Mozambique, southeastern Africa. It is about 500 miles (800 km) long and consists of volcanic rocks. The name is derived from a Zulu word, Ubombo, that means “big nose.” In South Africa the mountains extend from south of
- Lubombo Mountains (mountains, Africa)
Lebombo Mountains, long, narrow mountain range in South Africa, Swaziland, and Mozambique, southeastern Africa. It is about 500 miles (800 km) long and consists of volcanic rocks. The name is derived from a Zulu word, Ubombo, that means “big nose.” In South Africa the mountains extend from south of
- Lubomirski, Jerzy (Polish rebel)
Poland: Political stagnation: … in 1665–66 led by Marshal Jerzy Lubomirski. Two years later the frustrated John Casimir abdicated and settled in France, having prophetically warned the Sejm that Poland would fall victim to its rapacious neighbours unless it reformed its ways.
- Lubosi (South African king)
Lewanika was a Southern African king of the Lozi, from the Luyana lineage, one of a restored line of Lozi kings that recovered control of Barotseland (Bulozi) in the decades following the 1851 death of the Kololo conqueror, Sebetwane. Fearful of attack from the Portuguese (in Angola to the west)
- lubricating oil
petroleum refining: Lubricating oils: At one time the suitability of petroleum fractions for use as lubricants depended entirely on the crude oils from which they were derived. Those from Pennsylvania crude, which were largely paraffinic in nature, were recognized as having superior properties. But, with the advent…
- lubrication (technology)
lubrication, introduction of any of various substances between sliding surfaces to reduce wear and friction. Nature has been applying lubrication since the evolution of synovial fluid, which lubricates the joints and bursas of vertebrate animals. Prehistoric people used mud and reeds to lubricate
- Lubumbashi (Democratic Republic of the Congo)
Lubumbashi, second largest city in Democratic Republic of the Congo. The main industrial centre of the mining district of southeastern Congo, it lies 110 miles (180 km) northwest of Ndola, Zambia. Lubumbashi is the name of a small local river. The town was established by Belgian colonists in 1910
- Lubuskie (province, Poland)
Lubuskie, województwo (province), west-central Poland. One of the smallest and least-populous Polish provinces, it is bordered by the provinces of Zachodniopomorskie to the north, Wielkopolskie to the east, and Dolnośląskie to the south and by Germany to the west. It was formed in 1999 when the 49
- Luby’s (American company)
Luby’s shooting: …gunman opened fire in a Luby’s Cafeteria restaurant. Twenty-three people were killed and 20 were wounded; the gunman also killed himself. Until the Virginia Tech shooting in 2007, it was America’s deadliest mass shooting by a single person, but both have long since been eclipsed by other shootings, such as…
- Luby’s shooting (mass shooting, Killeen, Texas, United States [1991])
Luby’s shooting, mass shooting that occurred in Killeen, Texas, U.S., on October 16, 1991, when a gunman opened fire in a Luby’s Cafeteria restaurant. Twenty-three people were killed and 20 were wounded; the gunman also killed himself. Until the Virginia Tech shooting in 2007, it was America’s
- luc-bat (Vietnamese poetry couplet)
Vietnamese literature: …and thematic possibilities, including the luc-bat (“six-eight,” referring to a basic couplet of six syllables in the first line and eight in the second) prosody of the oral tradition. While concurring on the prestige of Chinese writing, Vietnamese literati were intent on establishing the independence of Vietnamese writing, even as…
- LUCA (biology)
last universal common ancestor (LUCA), microorganism proposed to be the genetic ancestor of all domains of life—namely, the Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya. The idea that all species descend from a common ancestor was first proposed in the 19th century, by naturalists Jean-Baptiste Lamarck and
- Luca (Italy)
Lucca, city, Toscana (Tuscany) regione, north-central Italy. It lies in the valley of the Serchio River and is almost surrounded by hills, with the Apuan Alps to the north and west. Lucca was a Ligurian and later an Etruscan town, and the Romans probably established a colony there in 180 bce
- Luca de Tena y Alvarez-Ossorio, Torcuato (Spanish journalist)
ABC: …weekly in 1903 by journalist Torcuato Luca de Tena y Alvarez-Ossorio, who later (1929) was made the marqués de Luca de Tena by King Alfonso XIII in recognition of his accomplishments with ABC. The paper became a daily in 1905 and after 1929 published a Seville edition.
- Luca Fa Presto (Italian painter)
Luca Giordano was the most celebrated and prolific Neapolitan painter of the late 17th century. His nickname Luca Fa Presto (“Luca, Work Quickly”) is said to derive from his painter-copyist father’s admonitions, which were certainly heeded. His other nickname, Proteus, was acquired as a result of
- Lucala River (river, Africa)
Cuanza River: …tributary of the Cuanza, the Lucala, is also navigable and is noted for a 330-foot (100-metre) waterfall along its course. Cambambe Dam (1963) supplies electricity to the Angolan capital of Luanda and provides irrigation water for the valley of the Cuanza in its lower course.
- Lucan (Roman author)
Lucan was a Roman poet and republican patriot whose historical epic, the Bellum civile, better known as the Pharsalia because of its vivid account of that battle, is remarkable as the single major Latin epic poem that eschewed the intervention of the gods. Lucan was the nephew of the
- Lucan’s First Book (translation by Marlowe)
English literature: Other poetic styles: …Marlowe’s blank verse rendering of Lucan’s First Book (published 1600), probably the finest Elizabethan translation.
- Lucan, George Charles Bingham, 3rd Earl of (British soldier)
George Charles Bingham, 3rd earl of Lucan was a British soldier who commanded the cavalry division, including the famous Light Brigade, at the Battle of Balaklava (q.v.) in the Crimean War. The eldest son of the 2nd Earl of Lucan, Lord Bingham was educated at Westminster and was commissioned an
- Lucania (ancient region, Italy)
Lucania, ancient territorial division of southern Italy corresponding to most of the modern region of Basilicata, with much of the province of Salerno and part of that of Cosenza. Before its conquest by the Lucanians, a Samnite tribe, about the mid-5th century bc, it formed part of the
- Lucania, Salvatore (American crime boss)
Lucky Luciano was the most powerful chief of American organized crime in the early 1930s and a major influence even from prison in 1936–45 and after deportation to Italy in 1946. Luciano emigrated with his parents from Sicily to New York City in 1906 and at the age of 10 was already involved in
- Lucanian (people)
Manius Curius Dentatus: …the year he conquered the Lucanians. During his term as censor, 272, he began to build an aqueduct to carry the waters of the Anio River into the city but died before its completion. Later writers idealized Dentatus as a model of old Roman simplicity and frugality.
- Lucanian Apennines (mountain range, Italy)
Apennine Range: Physiography: …feet at Mount Meta; the Lucanian Apennines, 7,438 feet at Mount Pollino; the Calabrian Apennines, 6,414 feet at Mount Alto; and, finally, the Sicilian Range, 10,902 feet at Mount Etna. The ranges in Puglia (the “boot heel” of the peninsula) and southeastern Sicily are formed by low, horizontal limestone plateaus,…
- Lucanidae (insect)
stag beetle, (family Lucanidae), any of some 900 species of beetles (insect order Coleoptera) in which the mandibles (jaws) are greatly developed in the male and resemble the antlers of a stag. In many species the elaborately branched and toothed mandibles may be as long as the beetle itself. If
- Lucanus capreolus (insect)
stag beetle: …occurring in North America include Lucanus capreolus and L. placidus, which are common in the east, and L. mazama (cottonwood stag beetle), which occurs in the southwest. L capreolus is distinguished by its shiny reddish brown colour, whereas L. placidus and L. mazama are usually very dark brown or black.…
- Lucanus mazama (insect)
stag beetle: mazama (cottonwood stag beetle), which occurs in the southwest. L capreolus is distinguished by its shiny reddish brown colour, whereas L. placidus and L. mazama are usually very dark brown or black. Most stag beetles live around rotting logs on which the larvae feed. Adults feed…
- Lucanus placidus (insect)
stag beetle: …America include Lucanus capreolus and L. placidus, which are common in the east, and L. mazama (cottonwood stag beetle), which occurs in the southwest. L capreolus is distinguished by its shiny reddish brown colour, whereas L. placidus and L. mazama are usually very dark brown or black. Most stag beetles…
- Lucanus, Marcus Annaeus (Roman author)
Lucan was a Roman poet and republican patriot whose historical epic, the Bellum civile, better known as the Pharsalia because of its vivid account of that battle, is remarkable as the single major Latin epic poem that eschewed the intervention of the gods. Lucan was the nephew of the
- Lucarelli, Carlo (Italian author)
Italian literature: Fiction at the turn of the 21st century: Carlo Lucarelli’s thriller Almost Blue (1997; the original and the English translation carried the same English-language title) was made into a film by Alex Infascelli in 2000. Its soundtrack—the music of Miles Davis, Chet Baker, and Coleman Hawkins—was already implicit in the book’s title. The…
- Lucaris, Cyril (patriarch of Constantinople)
Cyril Lucaris was the patriarch of Constantinople who strove for reforms along Protestant Calvinist lines. His efforts generated broad opposition both from his own communion and from the Jesuits. Lucaris pursued theological studies in Venice and Padua, and while studying further in Wittenberg and