- Laurana, Luciano (Italian architect)
Luciano Laurana was the principal designer of the Palazzo Ducale at Urbino and one of the main figures in 15th-century Italian architecture. Nothing is known of Laurana’s training. Because the triumphal arch of Alfonso of Aragon in Naples has much in common with Laurana’s later works at Urbino,
- Laurasia (ancient supercontinent)
Laurasia, ancient continental mass in the Northern Hemisphere that included North America, Europe, and Asia (except peninsular India). Its existence was proposed by Alexander Du Toit, a South African geologist, in Our Wandering Continents (1937). This book was a reformulation of the continental
- Laurel (Mississippi, United States)
Laurel, city, coseat (1906) with Ellisville of Jones county, southeastern Mississippi, U.S., on Tallahala Creek, about 30 miles (50 km) northeast of Hattiesburg. Founded in 1882 as a lumber camp, it was named for laurel shrubs, native to the surrounding forests. By the early 1900s it was the
- Laurel (Maryland, United States)
Laurel, city, Prince George’s county, central Maryland, U.S., on the Patuxent River midway between Washington, D.C., and Baltimore. The land was patented to Richard Snowden, who arrived about 1658 and founded the community. Montpelier Mansion (1783; Georgian), built by Thomas Snowden, is now owned
- Laurel and Hardy (comedy team)
Laurel and Hardy, were a comedy team that is widely regarded as the greatest in film history. Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy made more than 100 comedies together between 1921 and 1950, with Laurel playing the bumbling and innocent foil to the pompous Hardy. Stan Jefferson, the son of a theatrical
- Laurel Canyon (film by Cholodenko [2002])
Frances McDormand: …aging hedonist in the drama Laurel Canyon (2002) and appeared in the Jack Nicholson vehicle Something’s Gotta Give (2003). She was again nominated for the best-supporting-actress Oscar for her role as a truck driver with ALS in North Country (2005). Her subsequent films included Burn After Reading (2008),
- laurel cherry (plant)
cherry laurel: Prunus caroliniana, also known as the Carolina cherry laurel or laurel cherry, is endemic to the southeastern United States. A small tree, the plant grows about 5.4 meters (18 feet) tall and has glossy, rather oval or lance-shaped leaves. The small white flowers grow in…
- Laurel de Apolo (work by Vega)
Lope de Vega: Works of Lope de Vega: …be mentioned are the 7,000-line Laurel de Apolo (1630), depicting Apollo’s crowning of the poets of Spain on Helicon, which remains of interest as a guide to the poets and poetasters of the day; La Dorotea (1632), a thinly veiled chapter of autobiography cast in dialogue form that grows in…
- laurel family (plant family)
Lauraceae, the laurel family of flowering plants (order Laurales), comprising some 50 genera and more than 2,500 species of mostly evergreen shrubs and trees. Lauraceae is distributed throughout tropical and subtropical regions; principally Southeast Asia and tropical America, particularly Brazil.
- laurel forest (biome)
temperate rainforest, in ecology, a biome dominated by a mix of broad-leaved or coniferous trees that occurs in the middle latitudes, mostly between approximately 40° and 60° in both Northern and Southern hemispheres, and characterized by abundant moisture present throughout the year. Like all
- Laurel Forest (forest, Madeira Islands, Portugal)
Portugal: Vegetation: …area; its Laurel Forest (Laurisilva) was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1999.
- laurel leaf (herb)
bay leaf, leaf of the sweet bay tree (Laurus nobilis), an evergreen of the family Lauraceae, indigenous to countries bordering the Mediterranean. A popular spice used in pickling and marinating and to flavour stews, stuffings, and fish, bay leaves are delicately fragrant but have a bitter taste.
- laurel order (plant order)
Laurales, the laurel order of flowering plants, containing 7 families, 91 genera, and about 2,900 species. Members of Laurales are trees, shrubs, or woody vines. Most are found in tropical or warm temperate climates, and they are especially abundant in regions with moist equable climates. Lumber,
- Laurel, José P. (president of the Philippines)
José P. Laurel was a Filipino lawyer, politician, and jurist, who served as president of the Philippines (1943–45) during the Japanese occupation during World War II. Laurel was born and raised in a town south of Manila. His father served in the cabinet of Emilio Aguinaldo in the late 1890s. The
- Laurel, José Paciano (president of the Philippines)
José P. Laurel was a Filipino lawyer, politician, and jurist, who served as president of the Philippines (1943–45) during the Japanese occupation during World War II. Laurel was born and raised in a town south of Manila. His father served in the cabinet of Emilio Aguinaldo in the late 1890s. The
- Laurel, Stan (English actor and comedian)
Stan Laurel was an English comedic film actor best known as half of the legendary Laurel and Hardy team. Although he played a simpleminded bumbler, Stan Laurel was actually the major creative force behind the comedy duo. Laurel made some 100 comedies with Oliver Hardy between 1921 and 1950. Stan
- Laurel–Langley Agreement (United States-Philippines)
Bell Trade Act: …favourable to Filipino interests, the Laurel-Langley Agreement, which took effect in 1956.
- Laurelia aromatica (plant)
Laurales: Other families: …family Atherospermataceae, is known as Chile laurel or Peruvian nutmeg, and its seeds are ground up and used as a spice. Laurelia novae-zelandiae is used in New Zealand for boat building and furniture making. It yields a light, hard wood that is difficult to split and that dents rather than…
- Laurelia novae-zelandiae (plant)
Laurales: Other families: Laurelia novae-zelandiae is used in New Zealand for boat building and furniture making. It yields a light, hard wood that is difficult to split and that dents rather than breaks upon impact. The bark contains an alkaloid, pukateine (after pukatea, the Maori name for the…
- Laurelia sempervirens (plant)
Laurales: Other families: …family Atherospermataceae, is known as Chile laurel or Peruvian nutmeg, and its seeds are ground up and used as a spice. Laurelia novae-zelandiae is used in New Zealand for boat building and furniture making. It yields a light, hard wood that is difficult to split and that dents rather than…
- laurelwood (plant)
arbutus: Major species: Variously known as madrona, Pacific madrona, laurelwood, and Oregon laurel, A. menziesii occurs in western North America from British Columbia to California. It grows about 23 metres (75 feet) tall. The dark oblong glossy leaves are 5–15 cm (2–6 inches) long and are coloured grayish green beneath. The…
- Lauren Boebert (American politician)
Lauren Boebert is an American Republican congresswoman from Colorado, businesswoman, and gun-rights activist. She has served in the U.S. House of Representatives since January 2021. In 2024 she won reelection over Democratic challenger Trisha Calvarese. Boebert is a member of the Freedom Caucus, a
- Lauren, Ralph (American fashion designer)
Ralph Lauren is an American fashion designer who, by developing his brand around the image of an elite American lifestyle, built one of the world’s most successful fashion empires. He was born Ralph Lifshitz and grew up in the Bronx, in New York City. He and his brother changed their last name to
- Laurence of Brindisi, Saint (Christian saint)
St. Lawrence of Brindisi ; canonized 1881; feast day July 21) was a doctor of the church and one of the leading polemicists of the Counter-Reformation in Germany. He joined the Capuchin Friars Minor, a strict offshoot of the Franciscans, at Verona, Italy, in 1575, taking the name Lorenzo
- Laurence of Canterbury, St. (archbishop of Canterbury)
St. Lawrence of Canterbury ; feast day February 3) was the second archbishop of Canterbury. He was a missionary who played a large part in establishing the Anglo-Saxon church. In 597 Pope Gregory I the Great assigned Lawrence, who was then probably a Benedictine friar, to the first Anglo-Saxon
- Laurence, Jean Margaret (Canadian writer)
Margaret Laurence was a Canadian writer whose novels portray strong women striving for self-realization while immersed in the daily struggle to make a living in a male-dominated world. Her first publications reflect her life with her engineer husband (later divorced) in Somaliland (1950–52) and
- Laurence, Margaret (Canadian writer)
Margaret Laurence was a Canadian writer whose novels portray strong women striving for self-realization while immersed in the daily struggle to make a living in a male-dominated world. Her first publications reflect her life with her engineer husband (later divorced) in Somaliland (1950–52) and
- Laurence, Saint (Christian saint)
Saint Lawrence ; feast day August 10) was one of the most venerated Roman martyrs, celebrated for his Christian valour. He is the patron saint of the poor and of cooks. Lawrence was among the seven deacons of the Roman church serving Pope Sixtus II, whose martyrdom preceded Lawrence’s by a few
- Laurence, Timothy (British naval officer)
Anne, the Princess Royal: …the same year she married Comdr. Timothy Laurence, a naval officer and former aide to Queen Elizabeth.
- Laurencin, Marie (French painter)
Marie Laurencin was a French painter, printmaker, and stage designer known for her delicate portraits of elegant, vaguely melancholic women. From 1903 to 1904 Laurencin studied art at the Humbert Academy in Paris. Among her fellow students was Georges Braque, who, with Pablo Picasso, soon developed
- Laurens (county, South Carolina, United States)
Laurens, county, northern South Carolina, U.S. It is situated in a hilly piedmont region between the Saluda River to the southwest and the Enoree River to the northeast. The county is also drained by the Reedy River. Much of the land is wooded; the eastern section lies within Sumter National
- Laurens, Henri (French sculptor)
Henri Laurens was a French sculptor known for his Cubist works and his later massive studies, particularly of the female figure. He also made collages, lithographs, and other works on paper. Laurens worked as a stonemason and decorator before he made his first attempts at sculpture, which were
- Laurens, Henry (American statesman)
Henry Laurens was an early American statesman who served as president of the Continental Congress (1777–78). After pursuing a profitable career as a merchant and planter, Laurens espoused the patriot cause in the disputes with Great Britain preceding the American Revolution. He was made president
- Laurens, John (American army officer)
John Laurens was an American Revolutionary War officer who served as aide-de-camp to Gen. George Washington. John was the son of Henry Laurens, an American statesman who aligned himself with the patriot cause at an early date. John was educated in England, and when he returned to America in 1777 he
- Laurent, Auguste (French chemist)
Auguste Laurent was a French chemist who helped lay the foundations of organic chemistry. After conventional classical schooling, Laurent earned an undergraduate degree in engineering from the prestigious École des Mines in Paris. From 1830 he was employed as a laboratory assistant by Jean-Baptiste
- Laurent, François (Belgian historian)
François Laurent was a Belgian administrator, legal scholar, and historian noted as the author of a monumental universal history and a series of comprehensive works on civil law. After gaining his degree in law in 1832, he served as the head of a division at the Belgian Ministry of Justice and in
- Laurent, François, Marquis d’Arlandes (French aviator)
balloon: …Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier and François Laurent, marquis d’Arlandes, sailed over Paris in a Montgolfier balloon. They burned wool and straw to keep the air in the balloon hot; their flight covered 5.5 miles (almost 9 km) in about 23 minutes. In December of that year the physicist Jacques Charles,…
- Laurentia (paleocontinent)
North America: 600 to 250 million years ago: …300 million years ago when Laurentia collided with the southern hemispheric continent of Gondwana (Gondwanaland) to form the supercontinent Pangaea.
- Laurentian Hills (Ontario, Canada)
Laurentian Hills, town, Renfrew county, southeastern Ontario, Canada. It lies along the Chalk River near its mouth on the Ottawa River, 90 miles (145 km) northwest of Ottawa. The town was formed in 2000 by the amalgamation of Chalk River and several other adjacent communities and was renamed
- Laurentian Iroquois (people)
Northeast Indian: Territorial and political organization: Susquehannock, and Laurentian Iroquois. The Tuscarora, who also spoke an Iroquoian language, lived in the coastal hills of present-day North Carolina and Virginia.
- Laurentian Library (library, Florence, Italy)
Medicean-Laurentian Library, collection of books and manuscripts gathered during the 15th century in Florence by Cosimo the Elder and Lorenzo the Magnificent, both members of the Medici family. Part of the collection was open to the public before 1494, but in that year the Medici were overthrown
- Laurentian mixed forest (forest, North America)
North America: The Laurentian mixed forest: Lying in the warm-summer region of the cool temperate zone, the Laurentian mixed forest occurs in the Great Lakes–St. Lawrence, the upper Mississippi–Ohio, and the New England lowland regions. It consists mainly of deciduous hardwoods—maple, beech, oak, hickory, elm, ash, and birch—but…
- Laurentian Mountains (mountains, Canada)
Laurentian Mountains, mountains forming the Quebec portion of the Canadian Shield, particularly the area partially bounded by the Ottawa, St. Lawrence, and Saguenay rivers. It is one of the oldest mountain regions in the world and consists of Precambrian rocks (those more than 540 million years
- Laurentian Region (mountains, Canada)
Laurentian Mountains, mountains forming the Quebec portion of the Canadian Shield, particularly the area partially bounded by the Ottawa, St. Lawrence, and Saguenay rivers. It is one of the oldest mountain regions in the world and consists of Precambrian rocks (those more than 540 million years
- Laurentian schism (religion)
Laurentius: …gave his name to the Laurentian schism, a split in the Roman Catholic Church.
- Laurentian Shield (shield, North America)
Canadian Shield, one of the world’s largest geologic continental shields, centred on Hudson Bay and extending for 8 million square km (3 million square miles) over eastern, central, and northwestern Canada from the Great Lakes to the Canadian Arctic and into Greenland, with small extensions into
- Laurentian Trough (submarine trough, North America)
Laurentian Trough, submarine glacial trough in the eastern continental shelf of North America, the most impressive such feature on Earth. It extends from the mouth of the St. Lawrence River eastward through the Gulf of St. Lawrence to the edge of the continental shelf, about 190 miles (306 km)
- Laurentian University (university, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada)
Sudbury: …city is the site of Laurentian University (1960), Cambrian College (1966), and the French-language Collège Boréal (1995). Also located nearby, deep in a former mine, is the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory and its successor, SNOLAB, both cosmic-particle physics research facilities. Recreational areas in the vicinity include several provincial parks, and the…
- Laurentide Ice Sheet (Pleistocene ice sheet, North America)
Laurentide Ice Sheet, principal glacial cover of North America during the Pleistocene Epoch (about 2,600,000 to 11,700 years ago). At its maximum extent it spread as far south as latitude 37° N and covered an area of more than 13,000,000 square km (5,000,000 square miles). In some areas its
- Laurentide Scarp (geological feature, Canada)
Canada: The Canadian Shield: …a 2,000-foot (600-metre) escarpment, the Laurentide Scarp. The rim is almost imperceptible in southern Ontario, but in northern Ontario it rises again to almost 1,500 feet (450 metres) above the northern shore of Lake Superior. From Manitoba northwestward, the shield edge is marked by a large number of lakes.
- Laurentides, Les (mountains, Canada)
Laurentian Mountains, mountains forming the Quebec portion of the Canadian Shield, particularly the area partially bounded by the Ottawa, St. Lawrence, and Saguenay rivers. It is one of the oldest mountain regions in the world and consists of Precambrian rocks (those more than 540 million years
- Laurentius (antipope)
Laurentius was an antipope in 498 and from 501 to about 505/507, whose disputed papal election gave his name to the Laurentian schism, a split in the Roman Catholic Church. Late in the 5th century, the Roman church’s relations with the Eastern church in Constantinople became badly strained. Pope
- Laurentius of Canterbury, St. (archbishop of Canterbury)
St. Lawrence of Canterbury ; feast day February 3) was the second archbishop of Canterbury. He was a missionary who played a large part in establishing the Anglo-Saxon church. In 597 Pope Gregory I the Great assigned Lawrence, who was then probably a Benedictine friar, to the first Anglo-Saxon
- Lauria, Ruggiero di (Italian admiral)
Ruggiero di Lauria was an Italian admiral in the service of Aragon and Sicily who won important naval victories over the French Angevins (house of Anjou) in the war between France and Aragon over the possession of Sicily in the 1280s. Lauria, who was taken from Italy about 1262, grew up at the
- lauric acid (chemical compound)
carboxylic acid: Saturated aliphatic acids: …from C12 to C18 (lauric, myristic, palmitic, and stearic), are present in the fats and oils of many animals and plants, with palmitic and stearic acids being the most prevalent. Lauric acid (C12) is the main acid in coconut oil (45–50 percent) and palm kernel oil (45–55 percent). Nutmeg…
- Lauricocha (archaeological site, Peru)
pre-Columbian civilizations: The Late Preceramic: The caves at Lauricocha at about 13,000 feet in the central Andes, which had been occupied by deer and camelid hunters since nearly 8000 bce, were still used, at least as summer camps, by hunters who employed small leaf-shaped points. Gourds, squash, cotton, and lucuma, with seed plants…
- Lauricocha, Lake (lake, Peru)
Lake Lauricocha, northernmost of a chain of glacier-fed lakes in the Andes Mountains, central Peru, about 100 miles (160 km) north-northeast of Lima. It lies at an elevation of 12,615 feet (3,845 m). The Marañón River, the main stream of the Amazon River, issues from the lake; hence, it was once
- Laurie Hill (American television program)
Ellen DeGeneres: … (1989), Open House (1989–90), and Laurie Hill (1992). In 1994 she starred in These Friends of Mine; its name changed to Ellen the following season. The show was a success, earning nominations for Golden Globe, American Comedy, and Emmy awards. In 1997 DeGeneres revealed that she was gay, and Ellen…
- Laurie Island (island, South Atlantic Ocean)
South Orkney Islands: …two large islands (Coronation and Laurie) and a number of smaller islands and rocky islets and forms part of the British Antarctic Territory. The islands (total area about 240 square miles [620 square km]) are barren and uninhabited, but Signy Island is used as a base for Antarctic exploration. George…
- Laurie, Annie (American journalist)
Winifred Sweet Black was an American reporter whose sensationalist exposés and journalistic derring-do reflected the spirit of the age of yellow journalism. Winifred Sweet grew up from 1869 on a farm near Chicago. She attended private schools in Chicago, in Lake Forest, Illinois, and in
- Laurie, Hugh (British actor)
Hugh Laurie is a British comic actor perhaps best known for his role on the television series House (2004–12). Laurie was educated at Eton College and Selwyn College, Cambridge. His father won a gold medal at the 1948 London Olympics as a member of the British national rowing team, and, while at
- Laurie, James Hugh Calum (British actor)
Hugh Laurie is a British comic actor perhaps best known for his role on the television series House (2004–12). Laurie was educated at Eton College and Selwyn College, Cambridge. His father won a gold medal at the 1948 London Olympics as a member of the British national rowing team, and, while at
- Laurie, John (Scottish actor)
John Laurie was a Scottish theatre and film actor probably best known for his performance as Private Frazer, a Scottish mortician, in BBC television’s comedy series Dad’s Army (1968–77). Laurie’s first London appearance was in 1922 at the Old Vic, where he later starred in most of the leading
- Laurie, Piper (American actress)
Edward Buzzell: …solid acting by Rory Calhoun, Piper Laurie, Mamie Van Doren, and Jack Carson; Buzzell cowrote the screenplay for the film, which should not be confused with the 1978 musical concerning the Harlem Renaissance.
- Laurier, Sir Wilfrid (prime minister of Canada)
Wilfrid Laurier was the first French Canadian prime minister of the Dominion of Canada (1896–1911), noted especially for his attempts to define the role of French Canada in the federal state and to define Canada’s relations to Great Britain. He was knighted in 1897. Laurier was born of French
- Laurier, Wilfrid (prime minister of Canada)
Wilfrid Laurier was the first French Canadian prime minister of the Dominion of Canada (1896–1911), noted especially for his attempts to define the role of French Canada in the federal state and to define Canada’s relations to Great Britain. He was knighted in 1897. Laurier was born of French
- Lauriers sont coupés, Les (novel by Dujardin)
Édouard Dujardin: …“The Laurels Are Cut Down”; We’ll to the Woods No More), which was the first work to employ the interior monologue from which James Joyce derived the stream-of-consciousness technique he used in Ulysses.
- Laurisilva (forest, Madeira Islands, Portugal)
Portugal: Vegetation: …area; its Laurel Forest (Laurisilva) was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1999.
- Laurium (Greece)
Laurium, industrial town, Attica (Modern Greek: Attikí) periféreia (region), on the Aegean Sea, famous in antiquity for its silver mines. Its port, sheltered by Makrónisos island, imports coal, loads ore, and handles coastal and insular shipping. The mines may have been worked as early as 1000 bce,
- Lauriya Nandangarh (India)
South Asian arts: Mauryan period (c. 3rd century bce): at Vaishali (Bakhra), Rampurva, and Lauriya Nandangarh. The Vaishali pillar is heavy and squat, and the animal lacks the verve of the other animals—features, according to some, designating it as an early work, executed before the Mauryan style attained its maturity. By contrast, the Rampurva lion, finished with painstaking and…
- Laurolavinium (Italy)
Lavinium, an ancient town of Latium (modern Pratica di Mare, Italy), 19 miles (30 kilometers) south of Rome, regarded as the religious centre of the early Latin peoples. Roman tradition maintained that it had been founded by Aeneas and his followers from Troy and named after his wife, Lavinia. Here
- Laurus (plant, Laurus genus)
bay laurel, (Laurus nobilis), fragrant evergreen species of the family Lauraceae, the source of the cooking herb bay leaf. Bay laurel is native to the Mediterranean region but now widely cultivated in other regions of the world. In ancient Greece the wreath of honour placed upon the heads of heroes
- Laurus nobilis (plant, Laurus species)
bay tree, any of several trees with aromatic leaves, especially the sweet bay, or bay laurel (Laurus nobilis; family Lauraceae), source of the bay leaf used in cooking. Native to the Mediterranean region, sweet bay is an attractive evergreen tree that can reach as many as 18 metres (60 feet) in
- Laurussia (geological area)
Carboniferous Period: Paleogeography: The principal landmass of Laurussia was made up of present-day North America, western Europe through the Urals, and Balto-Scandinavia. Much of Laurussia lay near the paleoequator, whereas the cratons of Siberia, Kazakhstania, and most of China existed as separate continents occupying positions at high latitudes. During this time, the…
- laurustinus (plant)
viburnum: Laurustinus (V. tinus), a 3-metre-tall evergreen with oblong leaves, is native to the Mediterranean area. Sweet viburnum (V. odoratissimum), from India and Japan, bears dark-green, shiny, evergreen leaves and large clusters of fragrant flowers.
- Laus Vitae (work by D’Annunzio)
Italian literature: Literary trends before World War I: …of words—were implied in D’Annunzio’s Laus Vitae (1903; “In Praise of Life”).
- Lausanne (Switzerland)
Lausanne, capital of Vaud canton, western Switzerland, on the northern shore of Lake Geneva (Lac Léman); built on the southern slopes of the Jorat heights, its elevation ranges from 1,240 feet (378 metres) at Ouchy, its lake port, to 2,122 feet (647 metres) at Le Signal, its highest point. Two
- Lausanne Cathedral (cathedral, Lausanne, Switzerland)
stained glass: France: The rose window (1231–35) of Lausanne Cathedral in Switzerland was made by a wandering artist from Picardy, Peter of Arras, and is related in style and iconography to the Laon workshop.
- Lausanne Conference (1932)
Lausanne Conference, (June–July 1932), conference that was held to liquidate the payment of reparations by Germany to the former Allied and Associated powers of World War I. Attended by representatives of the creditor powers (Great Britain, France, Belgium, and Italy) and of Germany, the conference
- Lausanne Protocol (European history)
Lausanne Conference: …a “gentleman’s agreement” that the Lausanne Protocol would not be ratified until they had reached a satisfactory agreement with respect to their own war debts to the United States. Although the agreement was never ratified, the Lausanne Protocol in effect put an end to attempts to exact reparations from Germany.
- Lausanne, Treaty of (Allies-Turkey [1923])
Treaty of Lausanne, (1923), final treaty concluding World War I. It was signed by representatives of Turkey (successor to the Ottoman Empire) on one side and by Britain, France, Italy, Japan, Greece, Romania, and the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes (Yugoslavia) on the other. The treaty was
- Lausanne, Treaty of (Italy-Turkey [1912])
Italo-Turkish War: By the terms of the Treaty of Lausanne (also called Treaty of Ouchy; Oct. 18, 1912), Turkey conceded its rights over Tripoli and Cyrenaica to Italy. Although Italy agreed to evacuate the Dodecanese, its forces continued to occupy the islands.
- LAUSD (school district, Los Angeles, California, United States)
Los Angeles: Education: The Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD), the second largest public school district in the country, is run by an independent elected board working under state—rather than city—jurisdiction. Turmoil erupted in the 1970s over court-ordered busing to eliminate racial segregation. This litigation never gained full public…
- Lausiac History (work by Palladius)
Palladius: …monk, bishop, and chronicler whose Lausiac History, an account of early Egyptian and Middle Eastern Christian monasticism, provides the most valuable single source for the origins of Christian asceticism.
- Lausitz (region, Germany)
Lusatia, central European territory of the Sorbs (Lusatians, or Wends), called Sorben (or Wenden) by the Germans. Historic Lusatia was centred on the Neisse and upper Spree rivers, in what is now eastern Germany, between the present-day cities of Cottbus (north) and Dresden (south). In the 9th
- Lausitzer Gebirge (mountains, Czech Republic)
Lusatian Mountains, mountain group, situated in extreme northern Bohemia, Czech Republic; it is part of the Sudeten mountains (Czech: Sudety). The group extends from the Ještěd ridge in the east (3,320 feet [1,012 m]) to the gorge of the Elbe (Labe) River at Děčín in the west and also into Poland
- Lausonium (Switzerland)
Lausanne: Lausonium, or Lausonna, was originally on the shore of the lake southwest of the present city. During the invasion of the Alemanni (c. 379), the inhabitants took refuge in the hills above, building a settlement on the site of the present Cité district. In 590…
- Lausonna (Switzerland)
Lausanne: Lausonium, or Lausonna, was originally on the shore of the lake southwest of the present city. During the invasion of the Alemanni (c. 379), the inhabitants took refuge in the hills above, building a settlement on the site of the present Cité district. In 590…
- Laut Flores (sea, Pacific Ocean)
Flores Sea, portion of the western South Pacific Ocean, bounded on the north by the island of Celebes (Sulawesi) and on the south by the Lesser Sunda Islands of Flores and Sumbawa. Occupying a total surface area of 93,000 square miles (240,000 square km), it opens northwest through Makassar Strait
- Laut Island (island, Indonesia)
Laut Island, island off the southeastern coast of Borneo, Kalimantan Selatan provinsi (“province”), Indonesia. Laut Island lies in the Makassar Strait, 105 miles (169 km) east of Banjarmasin city. It is 60 miles (100 km) long north to south and 20 miles (30 km) wide east to west, and it covers an
- Lautaro (Mapuche leader)
Lautaro was a Mapuche Indian who led the native uprising against the Spanish conquerors in south-central Chile from 1553 to 1557. Lautaro was probably born in northern Chile; according to tradition, during his boyhood he was captured by the Spanish and forced to serve as a groom in the stables of
- Lautenwerck (musical instrument)
keyboard instrument: Related stringed keyboard instruments: Bach, were called in German Lautenwerck. The 18th-century tangent piano dispensed with pivoted hammers and instead had loose slips of wood or metal supported vertically in a rack above the backs of the keys; as a bar abruptly halted the motion of a key, its slip, or tangent, continued to…
- lauter tun (vessel)
beer: Separating the wort: …a separation vessel called the lauter tun, where a shallow filter bed is formed, allowing a more rapid runoff time of about 2.5 hours. Large modern breweries use either lauter tuns or special mash filters to speed up the runoff and conduct 10 or 12 mashes a day. As much…
- Lauterbourg, Philip James de (artist)
Philip James de Loutherbourg was an early Romantic painter, illustrator, printmaker, and scenographer, especially known for his paintings of landscapes and battles and for his innovative scenery designs and special effects for the theatre. First trained under his father, a miniature painter from
- Lauterbur, Paul (American chemist)
Paul Lauterbur was an American chemist who, with English physicist Sir Peter Mansfield, won the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 2003 for the development of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), a computerized scanning technology that produces images of internal body structures, especially
- Lauterbur, Paul Christian (American chemist)
Paul Lauterbur was an American chemist who, with English physicist Sir Peter Mansfield, won the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 2003 for the development of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), a computerized scanning technology that produces images of internal body structures, especially
- Lautgesetz und Analogie (work by Hermann)
Eduard Hermann: In 1931 Hermann published Lautgesetz und Analogie (“Sound Law and Analogy”), which discussed, in part, children’s acquisition of language. He made a useful contribution to German historical linguistics in Herkunft unserer Fragefürwörter (1943; “Origin of Our Interrogative Pronouns”). He also did a significant follow-up study on sound change in…
- Lautoka (Fiji)
Lautoka, city on the northwest coast of the island of Viti Levu, Fiji, South Pacific Ocean. Situated on the dry side of the island, Lautoka (originally called Namoli) serves an important sugarcane-growing district and is Fiji’s leading sugar export port. The Lautoka Sugar Mill is supplied with cane
- Lautréamont, comte de (French author)
comte de Lautréamont was a poet, a strange and enigmatic figure in French literature, who is recognized as a major influence on the Surrealists. The son of a chancellor in the French consulate, Lautréamont was sent to France for schooling; he studied at the imperial lycées in Tarbes (1859–62) and
- Lauzun, Antonin-Nompar de Caumont, Count and Duke de (French military officer)
Antonin-Nompar de Caumont, count and duke de Lauzun was a French military officer who was imprisoned by King Louis XIV to prevent him from marrying the Duchesse de Montpensier (known as La Grande Mademoiselle), the wealthiest heiress in Europe. The son of Gabriel de Caumont, comte de Lauzun, he was