- Martin, R. D. (British zoologist)
primate: Classification: …but the eminent primate specialist Robert D. Martin has long argued that their connection with authenticated primates is tenuous, to say the least, and, in the 1990s, the paleontologist K.C. Beard discovered hand bones and other material that suggest strongly that some of these fossils may actually belong not to…
- Martin, Rick (Canadian ice-hockey player)
Buffalo Sabres: …centre Gilbert Perreault, left wing Rick Martin, and right wing René Robert. The French Connection led Buffalo to a division championship in 1974–75, and the team advanced to the Stanley Cup finals in just its fifth season of existence, where it lost to the defending-champion Philadelphia Flyers. Along with left…
- Martin, Ricky (Puerto Rican singer and actor)
Ricky Martin is a Puerto Rican singer and actor who rose to stardom in Latin America as a member of the boy band Menudo and then became a worldwide pop music sensation with such singles as “La copa de la vida” and “Livin’ la Vida Loca.” He helped to popularize Latin American music and culture in
- Martin, Roberta (American gospel singer)
gospel music: Black gospel music: …Black gospel tradition have included Roberta Martin, a gospel pianist based in Chicago with a choir and a school of gospel singing; Mahalia Jackson, who toured internationally and was often broadcast on television and radio; and Sister Rosetta Tharpe (1915–73), whose guitar and vocal performances introduced gospel into nightclubs and…
- Martin, Saint (French saint)
St. Martin of Tours ; Western feast day, November 11; Eastern feast day November 12) was the patron saint of France, father of monasticism in Gaul, and the first great leader of Western monasticism. Of pagan parentage, Martin chose Christianity at age 10. As a youth, he was forced into the Roman
- Martin, Schön (German engraver)
Martin Schongauer was a painter and printmaker who was the finest German engraver before Albrecht Dürer. Schongauer was the son of Caspar Schongauer, a goldsmith of Augsburg. In 1465 he registered at the University of Leipzig but apparently remained there only for a short time. It is not clear
- Martin, Sir George (British musician and producer)
the Beatles: First success: Brian Epstein, George Martin, and Please Please Me: …their career at Parlophone was George Martin, a classically trained musician who from the start put his stamp on the Beatles, first by suggesting the band hire a more polished drummer (they chose Starr) and then by rearranging their second recorded song (and first big British hit), “Please Please Me,”…
- Martin, Sir George Henry (British musician and producer)
the Beatles: First success: Brian Epstein, George Martin, and Please Please Me: …their career at Parlophone was George Martin, a classically trained musician who from the start put his stamp on the Beatles, first by suggesting the band hire a more polished drummer (they chose Starr) and then by rearranging their second recorded song (and first big British hit), “Please Please Me,”…
- Martin, Steve (American actor and writer)
Steve Martin is an American comedian, writer, and producer who began his career as a stand-up comic and eventually achieved success in motion pictures, on television, on Broadway, and in literature. Martin attended Long Beach State College in California. His interest in performing was honed during
- Martin, Strother (American actor)
Cool Hand Luke: …of the prison warden (Strother Martin) and befuddles the guards with a series of daring escapes. In the process, he provides inspiration and vicarious thrills for his fellow inmates. The mounting tension between Luke and his jailers, however, leads to tragedy.
- Martin, Thomas (American politician)
Virginia: Virginia, c. 1900–50: Thomas Martin, U.S. senator from Virginia from 1893 to 1919, organized a Democratic program that emphasized low taxes, few government services, administrative efficiency, and white privilege. Harry F. Byrd, a newspaper editor and farmer who was elected governor in 1926 and U.S. senator in 1933,…
- Martin, Tony (American scholar)
Afrocentrism: Criticism of Afrocentrism: …disputes between Lefkowitz and Afrocentrist Tony Martin created strife between Black and Jewish intellectuals and made Afrocentrism vulnerable to charges of anti-Semitism. Critics further have argued that Afrocentrism’s search for exclusively African values sometimes comes perilously close to reproducing racial stereotypes. The movement’s followers maintain that Afrocentrism remains a valuable…
- Martin, Tony (American singer and actor)
Tony Martin was an American pop singer and movie actor whose handsome visage and smooth baritone voice made him one of the most celebrated all-around entertainers of his era. Morris grew up in Oakland, California, and, as a child, sang regularly at his mother’s sewing club. He later took up the
- Martin, Trayvon
shooting of Trayvon Martin: …Trayvon Martin, fatal shooting of Trayvon Martin by George Zimmerman in Sanford, Florida, on February 26, 2012. The shooting exposed deep divisions among Americans on race issues.
- Martin, Violet (Irish writer)
Somerville and Ross: Violet Martin grew up in a genteel Protestant literary family living on a country estate, Ross House, in somewhat straitened finances. After her father’s death in 1872, the family lived in Dublin, where she attended Alexandra College. Edith Somerville’s father was a British army lieutenant…
- Martin, Violet Florence (Irish writer)
Somerville and Ross: Violet Martin grew up in a genteel Protestant literary family living on a country estate, Ross House, in somewhat straitened finances. After her father’s death in 1872, the family lived in Dublin, where she attended Alexandra College. Edith Somerville’s father was a British army lieutenant…
- Martin-Harvey, Sir John (British actor and producer)
Sir John Martin Harvey was an English actor, producer, and theatre manager. The son of a yacht builder, Harvey originally planned for a career in naval architecture but decided instead to study theatre with the actor John Ryder. He made his first public appearance in London in 1881. A year later he
- Martin-Löf, Per (Swedish logician)
foundations of mathematics: Impredicative constructions: More recently, the Swedish logician Per Martin-Löf presented a new predicative type theory, but no one claims that this is adequate for all of classical analysis. However, the German-American mathematician Hermann Weyl (1885–1955) and the American mathematician Solomon Feferman have shown that impredicative arguments such as the above can often…
- Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg (university, Halle, Germany)
Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg, state-controlled coeducational institution of higher learning at Halle, Ger. The university was formed in 1817 through the merger of the University of Wittenberg and the University of Halle. Wittenberg was founded by the elector Frederick II of Saxony
- Martín-Santos, Luis (Spanish author and physician)
Luis Martín-Santos was a Spanish psychiatrist and novelist. Martín-Santos received a medical degree from the University of Salamanca and, in 1947, a doctorate in psychiatry from the University of Madrid. From 1951 until his death, he was director of the Psychiatric Sanitorium in San Sebastián. He
- Martina Franca (Italy)
Martina Franca, town, Puglia (Apulia) regione, southeastern Italy. It has numerous Baroque buildings, such as the Church of San Martino, the Corte palace, and particularly the civic centre, a former ducal palace (1669). In 1529, during the war against the Holy Roman emperor Charles V, the town
- Martine (play by Bernard)
Jean-Jacques Bernard: As in Martine(1922), perhaps the best example of his work, emotions are implied in gestures, facial expressions, fragments of speech, and silence.
- Martineau, Harriet (British author)
Harriet Martineau was an essayist, novelist, journalist, and economic and historical writer who was prominent among English intellectuals of her time. Perhaps her most scholarly work is The Positive Philosophy of Auguste Comte, Freely Translated and Condensed, 2 vol. (1853), her version of Comte’s
- Martineau, James (English theologian)
James Martineau was an English Unitarian theologian and philosopher whose writings emphasized the individual human conscience as the primary guide for determining correct behaviour. He was a brother of writer Harriet Martineau. From 1828 to 1832 Martineau served as junior minister at Eustace Street
- Martinelli Berrocal, Ricardo Alberto (president of Panama)
Ricardo Martinelli Panamanian businessman and politician who served as president of Panama (2009–14). Martinelli was educated primarily in the United States; he attended Staunton Military Academy in Virginia and the University of Arkansas, where he earned a degree in business in 1973. He went on to
- Martinelli, Angelica (Italian actress)
commedia dell’arte: Origins and development: …Drusiano Martinelli and his wife, Angelica, a company first mentioned in 1574. Troupes of the 17th century included a second Confidènti troupe, directed by Flaminio Scala, and the Accesi and the Fedeli, to which Giovambattista Andreini, called Lelio, one of the great commedia dell’arte actors, belonged. The first mention of…
- Martinelli, Drusiano (Italian actor)
commedia dell’arte: Origins and development: …1621; and the Uniti, under Drusiano Martinelli and his wife, Angelica, a company first mentioned in 1574. Troupes of the 17th century included a second Confidènti troupe, directed by Flaminio Scala, and the Accesi and the Fedeli, to which Giovambattista Andreini, called Lelio, one of the great commedia dell’arte actors,…
- Martinelli, Ricardo (president of Panama)
Ricardo Martinelli Panamanian businessman and politician who served as president of Panama (2009–14). Martinelli was educated primarily in the United States; he attended Staunton Military Academy in Virginia and the University of Arkansas, where he earned a degree in business in 1973. He went on to
- Martinelli, Tristano (Italian actor)
commedia dell’arte: Origins and development: …formed in 1595, to which Tristano Martinelli (c. 1557–1630), the famous Arlecchino, belonged; the Comici Confidènti, active from 1574 to 1621; and the Uniti, under Drusiano Martinelli and his wife, Angelica, a company first mentioned in 1574. Troupes of the 17th century included a second Confidènti troupe, directed by Flaminio…
- Martinet, André (French linguist)
linguistics: Sound change: …notably by the French linguist André Martinet. But no such theory has yet won universal acceptance, and it is likely that the causes of sound change are multiple.
- Martinet, Jean (French general)
drill: …XIV’s inspector general of infantry, Jean Martinet, whose name became a synonym for drillmaster. To make effective use of inaccurate muskets, concentrated volleys had to be delivered at short range. Troops advanced in rigidly maintained battle lines, all firing simultaneously on command. Through ceaseless drill, the Prussian Army of Frederick…
- Martinet, Louis A. (American attorney and doctor)
Jim Crow law: Challenging the Separate Car Act: …members of the committee was Louis A. Martinet, a Creole attorney and doctor who had also founded the Daily Crusader, and he and his newspaper became the leading opponents of the law. After its passage his paper called for both a legal challenge and a boycott of those railroads that…
- martineta tinamou (bird)
tinamou: Locomotion: The elegant crested tinamou (Eudromia elegans) of the open tableland of Argentina alternates periods of flapping with short glides. When flushed, forest species sometimes collide with branches and tree trunks and may injure themselves. If forced to make several flights in short succession, tinamous soon become…
- Martinex (comic-book superhero)
Guardians of the Galaxy: …encounters that world’s only survivor, Martinex, a crystalline human who was genetically altered to survive the frigid Plutonian environment. The pair attempt to hinder the Badoon war effort by sabotaging Pluto’s industrial infrastructure before teleporting to Earth, where they meet Vance Astro, a 20th-century astronaut who emerged from cryogenic suspension…
- Martinez (California, United States)
Martinez, city, seat (1850) of Contra Costa county, western California, U.S. It lies on the south shore of Carquinez Strait (between Suisun and San Pablo bays) north of Oakland. It was named for Ignacio Martínez, commandant of the San Francisco presidio and grantee (1829) of the Rancho El Pinole,
- Martínez Campos, Arsenio (prime minister of Spain)
Arsenio Martínez Campos was a general and politician whose pronunciamiento (military revolution) on December 29, 1874, restored Spain’s Bourbon dynasty. Martínez Campos received a military education and after 1852 served on Spain’s general staff. A competent soldier, he took part in the
- Martínez Cartas, María Estela (president of Argentina)
Isabel Perón is an Argentine politician who served as president of Argentina in 1974–76, the world’s first woman president. She was the third wife of President Juan Perón and served as vice president (1973–74) in his administration. She was born to a lower-middle-class family, acquired the name
- Martínez de Hoz, José (Argentine economist)
Argentina: The Videla regime and the Dirty War: …civilian from an old family, José Martínez de Hoz, became economy minister, but, keen as he was to deregulate the economy, the armed forces were equally determined to keep control. Annual inflation dropped in 1976–82 from about 600 to 138 percent—a more manageable but still distended level. Argentina’s balance of…
- Martínez de Irala, Domingo (Spanish explorer)
Argentina: Discovery and settlement: …under Juan de Ayolas and Domingo Martínez de Irala, lieutenants of Mendoza, pushed a thousand miles up the Plata and Paraguay rivers. Ayolas was lost on an exploring expedition, but Irala founded Asunción (now in Paraguay) among the Guaraní, a largely settled agricultural people. In 1541 the few remaining inhabitants…
- Martínez de la Rosa, Francisco de Paula (Spanish writer and statesman)
Francisco de Paula Martínez de la Rosa was a Spanish dramatist, poet, and conservative statesman. He became a professor of philosophy at the University of Granada in 1705. His play La conjuración de Venecia (“The Conspiracy of Venice”), written during his political exile in France (1823–31) and
- Martínez de Perón, María Estela (president of Argentina)
Isabel Perón is an Argentine politician who served as president of Argentina in 1974–76, the world’s first woman president. She was the third wife of President Juan Perón and served as vice president (1973–74) in his administration. She was born to a lower-middle-class family, acquired the name
- Martínez Estrada, Ezequiel (Argentine author)
Ezequiel Martínez Estrada was a leading post-Modernismo Argentine writer who influenced many younger writers. Martínez Estrada worked for 30 years (1916–46) at the Buenos Aires post office while also teaching initially in a preparatory school and later at the university there. Mostly self-taught,
- Martínez Ocasio, Benito Antonio (Puerto Rican singer and songwriter)
Bad Bunny is a Puerto Rican singer and songwriter who helped bring reggaeton and trap music to a wider audience. His urban music style also incorporated other genres, including rock, punk, and soul. He began singing when he was young, and he chose his stage name, Bad Bunny, after sharing an online
- Martínez Sierra, Gregorio (Spanish dramatist)
Gregorio Martínez Sierra was a poet and playwright whose dramatic works contributed significantly to the revival of the Spanish theatre. Martínez Sierra’s first volume of poetry, El poema del trabajo (1898; “The Poem of Work”), appeared when he was 17. Short stories reflecting the Modernist concern
- Martinez Special (alcoholic beverage)
martini, an alcoholic drink traditionally made with gin and dry vermouth and sometimes made with vodka in lieu of gin. Considered a sophisticated, classic cocktail, martinis are a popular mixed drink in many parts of the world. The martini’s name is attributed to several different sources. One
- Martinez v. Bynum (law case)
Martinez v. Bynum, case in which the U.S. Supreme Court on May 2, 1983, ruled (8–1) that a Texas residency requirement concerning children seeking a free public education while living apart from their parents or guardians was a bona fide residence requirement that met “constitutional standards.”
- Martínez Valdés de Franco, Carmen Polo y (Spanish consort)
Carmen Polo de Franco was a Spanish consort who was thought to be the force behind many of the religious and social strictures imposed on Spain during the repressive regime of her husband, Francisco Franco (1939–75). She was born into a middle-class provincial family and had a strict Roman Catholic
- Martínez Ybor, Vicente (Spanish-born merchant)
Florida: Population composition: …of revolutionary turmoil in Cuba, Vicente Martínez Ybor moved his cigar factories there from Havana. Labour troubles and a disastrous fire encouraged Ybor to move again in 1886, this time to Tampa, and again many Cubans followed the factories. A similar influx occurred in the early 1960s after the Cuban…
- Martínez Zuviría, Gustavo (Argentine writer)
Hugo Wast was an Argentine novelist and short-story writer, probably his country’s most popular and most widely translated novelist. Wast, a lawyer by profession, served as a national deputy (1916–20), as director of the National Library in Buenos Aires (1931–54), and as minister of justice and
- Martínez, Betita (American activist)
Elizabeth Martínez was an American activist who fought against poverty, racism, and militarism in the United States. Born to an American mother and a Mexican father, Martínez grew up in a generally comfortable economic environment in the United States. Her father told her stories of the Mexican
- Martinez, Bob (American politician)
Hispanic Americans: Hispanic activism: Bob Martinez, the first Hispanic governor of Florida, served as director of the U.S. national drug-control policy in 1991–93. Antonia Novello was the first Hispanic surgeon general of the United States, serving in 1990–93. Mel Martinez, who was secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing…
- Martínez, D. Antonio (Spanish metalworker)
metalwork: 18th century: …in Madrid in 1778 by D. Antonio Martínez, who favored severely classical designs. In both the northern and southern Netherlands, local production followed French precept, but more individuality survived in Germany. In Augsburg, excellent table silver was produced, but more important were the pictorial panels embossed in the highest relief…
- Martinez, Edgar (American baseball player)
Seattle Mariners: He joined with designated hitter Edgar Martinez, pitcher Randy Johnson, and right fielder Jay Buhner to lead Seattle to winning seasons in 1991 and 1993, but a postseason appearance eluded the team until 1995. That year, with the team threatened with relocation because of its substandard stadium and declining attendance,…
- Martínez, Elizabeth (American activist)
Elizabeth Martínez was an American activist who fought against poverty, racism, and militarism in the United States. Born to an American mother and a Mexican father, Martínez grew up in a generally comfortable economic environment in the United States. Her father told her stories of the Mexican
- Martínez, Elizabeth Sutherland (American activist)
Elizabeth Martínez was an American activist who fought against poverty, racism, and militarism in the United States. Born to an American mother and a Mexican father, Martínez grew up in a generally comfortable economic environment in the United States. Her father told her stories of the Mexican
- Martinez, Maria (American artist)
Maria Martinez was an American artist who, with her husband, Julian Martinez, pioneered a pottery style comprising a black-on-black design with matte and glossy finishes. Together they helped revitalize Pueblo pottery and transformed typically utilitarian objects into works of art that gained
- Martinez, Mel (United States senator)
Marco Rubio: Senate: first term: …vacant by the resignation of Mel Martinez. For much of his campaign, he ran a distant second to the incumbent Republican governor, Charlie Crist, until Crist broke with the Republican Party and declared himself an independent. Rubio thus received the formal support of his party, and he won the 2010…
- Martínez, Oscar (American musician)
Tejano: …orchestral lineup was reversed by Oscar Martínez, whose band featured a brass-oriented instrumentation that would remain the template for banda (two trumpets, alto and tenor saxophones, guitar, bass, and drums), which peaked in the 1970s.
- Martínez, Pedro (Dominican [republic] baseball player)
Pedro Martínez is a professional baseball player who was one of the greatest pitchers of all time. Martínez began his journey to the major leagues by signing with the National League Los Angeles Dodgers in 1988 and made his major league debut with the Dodgers in 1992. In 1993 he was traded to the
- Martínez, Pedro Jaime (Dominican [republic] baseball player)
Pedro Martínez is a professional baseball player who was one of the greatest pitchers of all time. Martínez began his journey to the major leagues by signing with the National League Los Angeles Dodgers in 1988 and made his major league debut with the Dodgers in 1992. In 1993 he was traded to the
- Martinez, Robert (American politician)
Hispanic Americans: Hispanic activism: Bob Martinez, the first Hispanic governor of Florida, served as director of the U.S. national drug-control policy in 1991–93. Antonia Novello was the first Hispanic surgeon general of the United States, serving in 1990–93. Mel Martinez, who was secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing…
- Martínez, Tomás Eloy (Argentine novelist, journalist, and educator)
Tomás Eloy Martínez was an Argentine novelist, journalist, and educator. Martínez earned an undergraduate degree in Spanish and Latin American literature from the Universidad de Tucumán and an M.A. from the Université de Paris VII. From 1957 to 1961 he was a film critic in Buenos Aires for La
- martingale (horsemanship)
horsemanship: Aids: Martingales are of three types: running, standing, or Irish. The running and standing martingales are attached to the saddle straps at one end and the bit reins or bridle at the other. The Irish martingale, a short strap below the horse’s chin through which the…
- martingale (mathematics)
probability theory: Martingale theory: As a final example, it seems appropriate to mention one of the dominant ideas of modern probability theory, which at the same time springs directly from the relation of probability to games of chance. Suppose that X1, X2,… is any stochastic process and,…
- Martinho do Rosário, António (Portuguese poet, dramatist, and physician)
Bernardo Santareno was a poet and dramatist, considered one of Portugal’s leading 20th-century playwrights. Santareno’s university studies at Coimbra were completed in medicine. Subsequently he pursued a dual career in Lisbon as a psychiatrist and writer. Santareno created a stage world reminiscent
- martini (alcoholic beverage)
martini, an alcoholic drink traditionally made with gin and dry vermouth and sometimes made with vodka in lieu of gin. Considered a sophisticated, classic cocktail, martinis are a popular mixed drink in many parts of the world. The martini’s name is attributed to several different sources. One
- Martini, Arturo (Italian sculptor)
Arturo Martini was an Italian sculptor who was active between the World Wars. He is known for figurative sculptures executed in a wide variety of styles and materials. Martini was trained in goldsmithing and in ceramics and worked for a time as a potter. In 1905 he began sculpting; he attended art
- Martini, Francesco di Giorgio Maurizio (Italian artist)
Francesco di Giorgio was an early Italian Renaissance painter, sculptor, architect, and designer. Remarkably versatile, a kind of Renaissance homo universale, Francesco combined the bold investigation of the humanist scholars with the conservative lyricism of the Sienese school. His early works
- Martini, Giovanni Battista (Italian composer)
Giovanni Battista Martini was an Italian composer, music theorist, and music historian who was internationally renowned as a teacher. Martini was educated by his father, a violinist; by Luc’Antonio Predieri (harpsichord, singing, organ); and by Antonio Riccieri (counterpoint). He was ordained in
- Martini, Ignaz (Spanish composer)
Vicente Martín y Soler was a Spanish opera composer known primarily for his melodious Italian comic operas and his work with acclaimed librettist Lorenzo Da Ponte in the late 18th century. Martín y Soler was initiated early into the music profession in his Spanish homeland, beginning as a singer in
- Martini, Matthias (encyclopaedist)
encyclopaedia: The development of the modern encyclopaedia (17th–18th centuries): …the classification put forward by Matthias Martini in his Idea Methodica (1606). Although Bacon was apparently unaware of this work, both philosophers were probably working from the same basic Platonic precepts. The results were profound: Diderot made a point of acknowledging the assistance Bacon’s analysis of the structure of human…
- Martini, Simone (Italian painter)
Simone Martini was an important exponent of Gothic painting who did more than any other artist to spread the influence of Sienese painting. Simone was very possibly a pupil of Duccio di Buoninsegna, from whom he probably inherited his love of harmonious, pure colours and most of his early figure
- Martini, Vincenzo, lo Spagnuolo il Valenziano (Spanish composer)
Vicente Martín y Soler was a Spanish opera composer known primarily for his melodious Italian comic operas and his work with acclaimed librettist Lorenzo Da Ponte in the late 18th century. Martín y Soler was initiated early into the music profession in his Spanish homeland, beginning as a singer in
- Martini-Henry breechloader (firearm)
small arm: The bolt action: …the British went to new Martini-Henry breechloaders of .45-inch calibre. In these rifles, pushing down a lever attached to the trigger guard lowered the entire breechblock, exposing the chamber, and raised the breechblock back to firing position when it was pulled back. Russia adopted two new 10-mm breechloaders, the Model…
- Martinic, Jaroslav (governor of Bohemia)
Defenestration of Prague: …imperial regents, William Slavata and Jaroslav Martinic, were tried and found guilty of violating the Letter of Majesty and, with their secretary, Fabricius, were thrown from the windows of the council room of Hradčany (Prague Castle) on May 23, 1618. Although inflicting no serious injury on the victims, that act,…
- Martinique (overseas department, France)
Martinique, island and overseas territorial collectivity of France, in the eastern Caribbean Sea. It is included in the Lesser Antilles island chain. Its nearest neighbours are the island republics of Dominica, 22 miles (35 km) to the northwest, and Saint Lucia, 16 miles (26 km) to the south.
- Martinique lancehead (snake)
fer-de-lance: …to the Martinique lancehead (Bothrops lanceolatus) found on the island of the same name in the West Indies. Several authoritative sources, however, frequently apply the name to the terciopelo (B. asper) and the common lancehead (B. atrox) of South America. The name fer-de-lance has also been used collectively to…
- Martinique, Département de la (overseas department, France)
Martinique, island and overseas territorial collectivity of France, in the eastern Caribbean Sea. It is included in the Lesser Antilles island chain. Its nearest neighbours are the island republics of Dominica, 22 miles (35 km) to the northwest, and Saint Lucia, 16 miles (26 km) to the south.
- Martinism (Christian mysticism)
illuminati: Later illuminati: … was given to the French Martinists, founded in 1754 by Martinez Pasqualis and propagated by Louis-Claude de Saint-Martin. By 1790 Martinism had been spread to Russia by Johann Georg Schwarz and Nikolay Novikov. Both strains of “illuminated” Martinism included elements of Kabbalism and
- Martino il Giovane (king of Sicily)
Martin I was a prince of Aragon, king of Sicily (1392–1409), and skilled soldier, who had to subdue a popular revolt to maintain his reign on the island. The son of Martin the Humanist of Aragon, Martin married Queen Mary of Sicily in November 1391. He was crowned at Palermo in May 1392, without
- Martino, Francesco Maurizio di (Italian artist)
Francesco di Giorgio was an early Italian Renaissance painter, sculptor, architect, and designer. Remarkably versatile, a kind of Renaissance homo universale, Francesco combined the bold investigation of the humanist scholars with the conservative lyricism of the Sienese school. His early works
- Martins de Bulhões, Fernando (Portuguese friar)
St. Anthony of Padua ; canonized 1232; feast day June 13) was a Franciscan friar and a dedicated patron of the poor. Portugal and the city of Padua, Italy, claim him as their patron saint, and he is invoked for the return of lost property. He is also the patron saint of sailors, fisherfolk,
- Martins Ferry (Ohio, United States)
Martins Ferry, city, Belmont county, eastern Ohio, U.S. It lies along the Ohio River (there bridged to Wheeling, W.Va.), about 60 miles (100 km) west of Pittsburgh, Pa. Squatters in the 1770s and ’80s formed settlements (Hoglin’s, or Mercer’s, Town and Norristown) on the site. In 1795 Absalom
- Martins, Peter (Danish dancer)
Peter Martins is a Danish dancer and choreographer, known principally for his work with the New York City Ballet. Martins began his dance training at the Royal Danish Ballet School in 1953, became a corps de ballet member in 1965, and was made a soloist two years later. George Balanchine, artistic
- Martinsburg (West Virginia, United States)
Martinsburg, city, seat (1772) of Berkeley county, eastern panhandle of West Virginia, U.S. It lies 16 miles (26 km) southwest of Hagerstown, Maryland. Settled in 1732, it was laid out by Adam Stephen, later a general in the American Revolution, and was named for Colonel Thomas B. Martin, a nephew
- Martinsen, Bente (Norwegian skier)
Bente Skari is a Norwegian cross-country skier who won numerous World Cup titles and who dominated international events in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Skari was the daughter of former Olympic ski medalist and International Ski Federation executive Odd Martinsen. Although she skied during the
- Martinsen, Odd (Norwegian skier)
Bente Skari: …and International Ski Federation executive Odd Martinsen. Although she skied during the 1992 season, she was not an immediate hit on the World Cup circuit. She moved up during the 1994 Olympic season and won her first World Cup race in December 1997, but it was not until 1998, when…
- Martinson, Harry (Swedish author)
Harry Martinson was a Swedish novelist and poet who was the first self-taught, working-class writer to be elected to the Swedish Academy (1949). With Eyvind Johnson he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1974. Martinson spent his childhood in a series of foster homes and his youth and
- Martinson, Harry Edmund (Swedish author)
Harry Martinson was a Swedish novelist and poet who was the first self-taught, working-class writer to be elected to the Swedish Academy (1949). With Eyvind Johnson he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1974. Martinson spent his childhood in a series of foster homes and his youth and
- Martinson, Moa (Swedish author)
Moa Martinson was a Swedish novelist who was among the first to write about the agricultural labourer, the landless worker of the Swedish countryside known as statare. The first half of her life was filled with poverty and misery, yet she retained an ability to write about the life of the workers
- Martinsville (Virginia, United States)
Martinsville, city, seat (1793) of Henry county (though administratively independent of it), southern Virginia, U.S., in the eastern foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Established in 1793, when the county courthouse was located there, it was known as Henry County Courthouse until the name was
- Martinsville (Ohio, United States)
Martins Ferry, city, Belmont county, eastern Ohio, U.S. It lies along the Ohio River (there bridged to Wheeling, W.Va.), about 60 miles (100 km) west of Pittsburgh, Pa. Squatters in the 1770s and ’80s formed settlements (Hoglin’s, or Mercer’s, Town and Norristown) on the site. In 1795 Absalom
- Martinů, Bohuslav (Czech composer)
Bohuslav Martinů was a modern Czech composer whose works exhibit a distinctive blend of French and Czech influences. Martinů studied violin from age six, attended and was expelled from the Prague Conservatory, and in 1913 joined the Prague Philharmonic Orchestra. After the success of his ballet
- Martinus Gosia (Italian jurist)
Martinus Gosia was a jurist, one of the “four doctors” of the Bologna Law School, and an important successor of Irnerius, although probably not his pupil. Martinus, who advocated a more liberal interpretation of the law than did his Bolognese contemporary Bulgarus, gave considerable weight to
- Martinuzzi, György (Hungarian cardinal)
György Martinuzzi was a Hungarian statesman and later cardinal who worked to restore and maintain the national unity of Hungary. Born of a Croatian father and a mother of the patrician Venetian family of Martinuzzi, György became a Paulist friar at the age of 28 after a brief military career. A
- Martita, I Remember You (novella by Cisneros)
Sandra Cisneros: Books: …she was an aspiring author, Martita, I Remember You (2021) follows twentysomething Corina, who leaves her Mexican family in Chicago to pursue her literary dreams in Paris, where she befriends other expatriates.
- Martius, Karl Friedrich Philipp von (German botanist)
Karl Friedrich Philipp von Martius was a German botanist best known for his work on Brazilian flora. Martius studied medicine at Erlangen University and was an élève of the Royal Bavarian Academy (1814–17). On April 2, 1817, Martius left from Trieste with an Austrian expedition to Brazil. In
- martlet (bird)
martin, any of several swallows belonging to the family Hirundinidae (order Passeriformes). In America the name refers to the purple martin (Progne subis) and its four tropical relatives—at 20 cm (8 inches) long, the largest American swallows. The sand martin, or bank swallow (Riparia riparia), a
- Marto, Francisco (Portuguese child)
Fátima: …dos Santos and her cousins Francisco and Jacinta Marto, reportedly saw a woman who identified herself as the Lady of the Rosary. On October 13, a crowd (generally estimated at about 70,000) gathered at Fátima witnessed a “miraculous solar phenomenon” immediately after the lady had appeared to the children. After…
- Marto, Jacinta (Portuguese child)
Fátima: … and her cousins Francisco and Jacinta Marto, reportedly saw a woman who identified herself as the Lady of the Rosary. On October 13, a crowd (generally estimated at about 70,000) gathered at Fátima witnessed a “miraculous solar phenomenon” immediately after the lady had appeared to the children. After initial opposition,…