- Nick at Nite (American television company)
Television in the United States: The 1990s: the loss of shared experience: …(Cartoon Network), old television (Nick at Nite, TV Land), old movies (American Movie Classics, Turner Classic Movies), home improvement and gardening (Home and Garden Television [HGTV]), comedy (Comedy Central), documentaries (Discovery Channel), animals (Animal Planet), and a host of
- Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds (rock band)
Nick Cave: Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds and Grinderman: …Harvey went on to form Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds in Berlin with former Magazine bassist Barry Adamson and Einstürzende Neubauten front man Blixa Bargeld. The Bad Seeds combined the Birthday Party’s dark intensity with a passionate exploration of love and the pain it can bring. The band’s biggest…
- Nick of the Woods (work by Bird)
Robert Montgomery Bird: The most popular was Nick of the Woods (1837), in which he attempted to demolish the image of the American Indian as a noble savage by picturing him with the contempt and hatred that the backwoodsman often showed.
- Nick of Time (film by Badham [1995])
Christopher Walken: Smith in the thriller Nick of Time (1995). He also appeared in the crime adventure The Funeral (1996) and played a Hessian horseman in Burton’s Sleepy Hollow (1999). In 2001 Walken won new fans with a remarkable dancing sequence in the video—directed by Spike Jonze—for British hip-hop DJ Fatboy…
- Nick of Time (album by Raitt)
Bonnie Raitt: …album of the year, for Nick of Time (1989).
- nickel (chemical element)
nickel (Ni), chemical element, ferromagnetic metal of Group 10 (VIIIb) of the periodic table, markedly resistant to oxidation and corrosion. atomic number 28 atomic weight 58.69 melting point 1,453 °C (2,647 °F) boiling point 2,732 °C (4,950 °F) density 8.902 (25 °C) oxidation states 0, +1, +2, +3
- nickel arsenide
chemical bonding: Molecular shapes and VSEPR theory: …for example, in the compound nickel arsenide (NiAs), which has a structure that suggests that a degree of covalent bonding is present (Figure 6). It is fully apparent in the structure of diamond (Figure 7), in which each carbon atom is in a tetrahedral position relative to its neighbour and…
- Nickel Boys, The (novel by Whitehead)
12 Contemporary Black Authors You Must Read: Colson Whitehead: …won his second Pulitzer for The Nickel Boys. Set in the 1960s, the novel centers on two Black teenagers who are placed in a juvenile reformatory. Whitehead has also published nonfiction, including The Noble Hustle, about the 2011 World Series of Poker.
- nickel carbonyl (chemical compound)
nickel: Compounds: …other important commercial compounds are nickel carbonyl, or tetracarbonylnickel, Ni(CO)4. This compound, in which nickel exhibits a zero oxidation state, is used primarily as a carrier of carbon monoxide in the synthesis of acrylates (compounds utilized in the manufacture of plastics) from acetylene and alcohols. It was the first of…
- nickel chloride hexahydrate (chemical compound)
nickel processing: Chemical compounds: Nickel chloride hexahydrate, NiCl2 · 6H2O, is often used in conjunction with the sulfate in plating baths; while the nickel sulfamate, Ni(SO3NH2) · 4H2O, and the nickel fluoborate, Ni(BF4)2, are employed in some of the newer types of electroplating baths.
- nickel curve (baseball)
Charles Albert Bender: …the pitch known as the slider.
- nickel difluoride (chemical compound)
coordination compound: Characteristics of coordination compounds: … (NaCl) or nickel(+2) fluoride (nickel difluoride; NiF2) are not considered coordination compounds, because they consist of continuous ionic lattices rather than discrete molecules. Nevertheless, the arrangement (and bonding) of the anions surrounding the metal ions in these salts is similar to that in coordination compounds. Coordination compounds generally display…
- nickel dimethylglyoxime (chemical compound)
nickel processing: Chemical compounds: Nickel dimethylglyoxime is an insoluble salt useful in analytical chemistry in precipitating nickel. Nickel carbonyl, Ni(CO)4, a liquid at room temperature, is employed in the carbonyl nickel-refining process. Like all other carbonyls, it is poisonous. Nickel subsulfide, Ni3S2, is the nickel component of matte involved…
- nickel fluoborate (chemical compound)
nickel processing: Chemical compounds: …Ni(SO3NH2) · 4H2O, and the nickel fluoborate, Ni(BF4)2, are employed in some of the newer types of electroplating baths.
- nickel fluoride (chemical compound)
coordination compound: Characteristics of coordination compounds: … (NaCl) or nickel(+2) fluoride (nickel difluoride; NiF2) are not considered coordination compounds, because they consist of continuous ionic lattices rather than discrete molecules. Nevertheless, the arrangement (and bonding) of the anions surrounding the metal ions in these salts is similar to that in coordination compounds. Coordination compounds generally display…
- nickel oxide (chemical compound)
nickel processing: Chemical compounds: Nickel oxide, NiO, is involved in refining processes and also may be an end product.
- Nickel Plate, The (American company)
New York, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad Company, American railroad that began operations between Buffalo, N.Y., and Chicago in 1882. That same year William H. Vanderbilt purchased control because its tracks paralleled those of his Lake Shore and Michigan Southern road between Buffalo and
- nickel processing
nickel processing, preparation of the metal for use in various products. Although it is best known for its use in coinage, nickel (Ni) has become much more important for its many industrial applications, which owe their importance to a unique combination of properties. Nickel has a relatively high
- Nickel Ride, The (film by Mulligan [1974])
Robert Mulligan: The Nickel Ride (1974), with Jason Miller as a fence for the Mafia’s stolen goods, earned critical praise, but it failed at the box office. Audiences also ignored Bloodbrothers (1978), an adaptation of the Richard Price novel, with Richard Gere, Tony Lo Bianco, and Paul…
- nickel silver (metal alloy)
nickel silver, a range of alloys of copper, nickel, and zinc which are silvery in appearance but contain no silver. Its composition varies from 7 to 30 percent nickel, the alloy most widely used being 18 percent nickel silver (18 percent nickel, 62 percent copper, 20 percent zinc). In general the
- nickel subsulfide (chemical compound)
nickel processing: Chemical compounds: Nickel subsulfide, Ni3S2, is the nickel component of matte involved in pyrometallurgy. Nickel oxide, NiO, is involved in refining processes and also may be an end product.
- nickel sulfamate (chemical compound)
nickel processing: Chemical compounds: …in plating baths; while the nickel sulfamate, Ni(SO3NH2) · 4H2O, and the nickel fluoborate, Ni(BF4)2, are employed in some of the newer types of electroplating baths.
- nickel sulfate hexahydrate (chemical compound)
nickel processing: Chemical compounds: The compound nickel sulfate hexahydrate, NiSO4 · 6H2O, is employed in the electrolytic refining of nickel as well as in most nickel electroplating baths. Nickel chloride hexahydrate, NiCl2 · 6H2O, is often used in conjunction with the sulfate in plating baths; while the nickel sulfamate, Ni(SO3NH2) ·…
- nickel tetracarbonyl (chemical compound)
nickel: Compounds: …other important commercial compounds are nickel carbonyl, or tetracarbonylnickel, Ni(CO)4. This compound, in which nickel exhibits a zero oxidation state, is used primarily as a carrier of carbon monoxide in the synthesis of acrylates (compounds utilized in the manufacture of plastics) from acetylene and alcohols. It was the first of…
- nickel-based alloy (metallurgy)
materials science: Alloying: …classified into three major categories: nickel-based, cobalt-based, and iron-based. Nickel-based superalloys predominate in the turbine section of jet engines. Although they have little inherent resistance to oxidation at high temperatures, they gain desirable properties through the addition of cobalt, chromium, tungsten, molybdenum, titanium, aluminum, and niobium.
- nickel-cadmium cell (electronics)
battery: Alkaline storage batteries: Nickel (hydroxide)–cadmium systems are the most common small rechargeable battery type for portable appliances. The sealed cells are equipped with “jelly roll” electrodes, which allow high current to be delivered in an efficient way. These batteries are capable of delivering exceptionally high currents, can be…
- nickel–iron (mineral)
nickel–iron, very rare native alloy of nickel and iron that contains between 24 and 77 percent nickel. It occurs in the gold washings of the Gorge River, N.Z.; in the platinum sands of the Bobrovka River, Urals; and in the gold dredgings of the Fraser River, B.C. It also occurs in large ellipsoidal
- nickel-iron battery (electronics)
battery: Alkaline storage batteries: Nickel (hydroxide)–iron batteries can provide thousands of cycles but do not recharge with high efficiency, generating heat and consuming more electricity than is generally desirable. They have been used extensively in the European mining industry, however.
- nickelodeon (motion-picture theater)
nickelodeon, Early motion-picture theater, so named because admission typically cost a nickel. Nickelodeons offered continuous showings of one- and two-reel films, lasting from 15 minutes to one hour and accompanied by a piano. The success of the Pittsburgh nickelodeon established in 1905 by Harry
- Nickelodeon (film by Bogdanovich [1976])
Peter Bogdanovich: Films: …1976 Bogdanovich directed and cowrote Nickelodeon, a more modestly conceived project that was a tribute to the pioneers of the film industry. Although it performed poorly at the box office, its verisimilitude—Bogdanovich incorporated anecdotes he had been given by Ford, Dwan, and Raoul Walsh, among others—and sincerity make it worthwhile.…
- Nickelodeon (American television channel)
Nickelodeon, American-based cable television channel, focused on children’s programming. It is among the top-rated networks in the history of cable television. The channel launched as Pinwheel on December 1, 1977, originally airing educational fare from around the world for 12 hours a day, without
- Nickelodeon Movies (American company)
Nickelodeon: Since 1995 Nickelodeon Movies has produced children’s films, many of which have been adaptations either of popular books or of the network’s television series. The Rugrats Movie (1998) became the first non-Disney animated movie to gross more than $100 million, and Rango (2011) earned an Academy Award…
- nicking (music)
keyboard instrument: Flue pipes: Heavy nicking, commonly practiced in the early 20th century, produces a smooth and sluggish attack. Light nicking or no nicking, as used up to the 18th century and in some more advanced modern organs, produces a vigorous attack, or chiff, somewhat like tonguing in a woodwind…
- Nicklaus, Jack (American golfer)
Jack Nicklaus is an American professional golfer, a dominating figure in world golf from the 1960s to the ’80s. (Read Jack Nicklaus’s Britannica entry on the U.S. Open.) While a student at Ohio State University, Nicklaus won the U.S. Amateur Championship in 1959 and again in 1961. Also in 1961
- Nicklaus, Jack William (American golfer)
Jack Nicklaus is an American professional golfer, a dominating figure in world golf from the 1960s to the ’80s. (Read Jack Nicklaus’s Britannica entry on the U.S. Open.) While a student at Ohio State University, Nicklaus won the U.S. Amateur Championship in 1959 and again in 1961. Also in 1961
- Nickleby, Nicholas (fictional character)
Nicholas Nickleby, fictional character, the protagonist of Charles Dickens’s novel Nicholas Nickleby
- nickname
nickname, an informal name used to replace a formal one, often giving rise to familiar or humorous terms. The word nickname is derived from the Middle English ekename, literally meaning “also-name,” via nekename. Nicknames differ from pseudonyms, which are usually used to conceal one’s identity.
- Nicks, Stephanie Lynn (American singer-songwriter)
Stevie Nicks is an American singer-songwriter known for her work with the pop-rock band Fleetwood Mac as well as for her solo efforts. Nicks’s ethereal stage presence, powerful songwriting, and low, rich vocals established her as a leading musical artist. Nicks was born to Barbara and Jess Nicks
- Nicks, Stevie (American singer-songwriter)
Stevie Nicks is an American singer-songwriter known for her work with the pop-rock band Fleetwood Mac as well as for her solo efforts. Nicks’s ethereal stage presence, powerful songwriting, and low, rich vocals established her as a leading musical artist. Nicks was born to Barbara and Jess Nicks
- Niclaes, Hendrik (Dutch religious leader)
Familist: …of Dutch origin, followers of Hendrik Niclaes, a 16th-century Dutch merchant. Niclaes’ main activity was in Emden, East Friesland (1540–60). In his Evangelium regni, issued in England as A Joyfyl Message of the Kingdom, he invited all “lovers of truth, of what nation and religion soever they be, Christian, Jews,…
- Nico (German singer)
Jackson Browne: …as a backing musician for Nico of the Velvet Underground and for Tim Buckley. He was first noticed as a songwriter, and his compositions were recorded by performers such as Tom Rush, the Byrds, and Linda Ronstadt before he recorded his eponymous debut album in 1972 (featuring the Top Ten…
- Nicobar Islands (islands, India)
Nicobar Islands, island group, Andaman and Nicobar Islands union territory, India. The Nicobar Islands lie in the Indian Ocean about 800 miles (1,300 km) east of Sri Lanka and have an area of 711 square miles (1,841 square km). The Nicobars, along with the Andaman Islands to the north, constitute
- Nicobar Islands breadfruit (plant)
pandanus: Major species and uses: utilis and the Nicobar Islands breadfruit (P. leram), are edible. The leaves of pandan (P. amaryllifolius) are used in Southeast Asian cooking, notably in Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia. Thatch screw pine has flowers whose essence (called pandanus, or kewra, water) is used as a flavouring in North Indian…
- Nicobarese (people)
Andaman and Nicobar Islands: Population composition: …of the Nicobar Islands, the Nicobarese (including the related Shompen), continued to constitute the majority of the population of the Nicobars in the early 21st century. They probably descend both from the Malays of insular and peninsular Southeast Asia and from the Mon (also called the Talaing) of Myanmar. The…
- Nicobarese languages
Nicobarese languages, Austroasiatic languages spoken on the Nicobar Islands and once considered to form a distinct family within the Austroasiatic stock. More recent data on these hitherto poorly known languages suggest that they form a distinct branch of the Mon-Khmer family, itself a part of the
- Nicocles (ruler of Salamis)
Isocrates: Early life and influences: …history between 378 and 355; Nicocles, the ruler of Salamis in Cyprus; and the two greatest Greek historians of the 4th century—Ephorus, who wrote a universal history, and Theopompus, who wrote the history of Philip II of Macedon. In this way his influence permeated both politics and literature.
- Nicocreon (king of Salamis)
Cyprus: Hellenistic and Roman rule: …the last king of Salamis, Nicocreon, to commit suicide in 310 bce, together with all his family. For two and a half centuries, Cyprus remained a Ptolemaic possession, ruled by a strategus, or governor-general.
- Nicodemus (biblical figure)
Nicodemus, in the Gospel According to John, a Pharisee and ruler of the Jews at the time of Jesus’ preaching and crucifixion. Nicodemus is mentioned only three times in the Gospel According to John (and nowhere in the Synoptic Gospels). As such, his character remains largely ambiguous within the
- Nicodemus of the Holy Mountain, Saint (Greek monk)
Saint Nicodemus the Hagiorite ; canonized May 31, 1955) was a Greek Orthodox monk and author of ascetic prayer literature. He was influential in reviving the practice of Hesychasm, a Byzantine method of contemplative prayer. Forced to flee Turkish persecution in the midst of his studies at Smyrna
- Nicodemus The Hagiorite, Saint (Greek monk)
Saint Nicodemus the Hagiorite ; canonized May 31, 1955) was a Greek Orthodox monk and author of ascetic prayer literature. He was influential in reviving the practice of Hesychasm, a Byzantine method of contemplative prayer. Forced to flee Turkish persecution in the midst of his studies at Smyrna
- Nicodemus, Gospel of (Apocryphal literature)
St. Joseph of Arimathea: In the apocryphal Gospel of Nicodemus (or Acts of Pilate; 4th/5th century), Jews imprison Joseph after Jesus’ burial, but he is released by the risen Lord, thus becoming the first witness of the Resurrection. In Robert de Boron’s verse romance Joseph d’Arimathie (c. 1200), he is entrusted with…
- Nicol prism (optics)
prism: The Nicol prism consists of two specially cut calcite prisms bonded together with an adhesive known as Canada balsam. This prism transmits waves vibrating in one direction only and thus produces a plane-polarized beam from ordinary light.
- Nicol, Abioseh (Sierra Leonean physician and writer)
Davidson Nicol was a Sierra Leonean diplomat, physician, medical researcher, and writer whose short stories and poems are among the best to have come out of West Africa. Nicol was educated in medicine and natural sciences in Sierra Leone, Nigeria, and England, and he subsequently served in various
- Nicol, Abioseh (Sierra Leonean physician and writer)
Davidson Nicol was a Sierra Leonean diplomat, physician, medical researcher, and writer whose short stories and poems are among the best to have come out of West Africa. Nicol was educated in medicine and natural sciences in Sierra Leone, Nigeria, and England, and he subsequently served in various
- Nicol, Davidson (Sierra Leonean physician and writer)
Davidson Nicol was a Sierra Leonean diplomat, physician, medical researcher, and writer whose short stories and poems are among the best to have come out of West Africa. Nicol was educated in medicine and natural sciences in Sierra Leone, Nigeria, and England, and he subsequently served in various
- Nicol, Davidson Sylvester Hector Willoughby (Sierra Leonean physician and writer)
Davidson Nicol was a Sierra Leonean diplomat, physician, medical researcher, and writer whose short stories and poems are among the best to have come out of West Africa. Nicol was educated in medicine and natural sciences in Sierra Leone, Nigeria, and England, and he subsequently served in various
- Nicol, Joseph Arthur Colin (British zoologist)
feeding behaviour: Types of food procurement: …zoologists Sir Maurice Yonge and J.A.C. Nicol, based on the structural mechanisms utilized, although, as Nicol observed, “many animals make use of a variety of feeding mechanisms, conjointly, or separately as occasion demands”:
- Nicol, Mary Douglas (Kenyan archaeologist)
Mary Douglas Leakey was an English-born archaeologist and paleoanthropologist, a member of the distinguished Leakey family of scholars and researchers, who made several fossil finds of great importance in the understanding of human evolution. Her early finds were interpreted and publicized by her
- Nicol, William (scientist)
Earth sciences: Crystallography and the classification of minerals and rocks: …studies of fossilized wood by William Nicol. In 1849 Clifton Sorby showed that minerals viewed in thin section could be identified by their optical properties, and soon afterward improved classifications of rocks were made on the basis of their mineralogic composition. The German geologist Ferdinand Zirkel’s Mikroscopische Beschaffenheit der Mineralien…
- Nicola di Lorenzo (Italian leader)
Cola Di Rienzo was an Italian popular leader who tried to restore the greatness of ancient Rome. He later became the subject of literature and song, including a novel by the English novelist E.G.E. Bulwer-Lytton (1835) and an opera by Richard Wagner (1842), both entitled Rienzi. He was the son of a
- Nicolaas Grevinchovius (Dutch theologian)
William Ames: …for the passage, he debated Nicolaas Grevinckhoven (Grevinchovius), minister to the local Arminian Church, on the doctrines of atonement and predestination. The Calvinists emphasized that salvation is limited to those who are foreordained by God to receive it and are not capable of falling out of his grace. The Arminians,…
- Nicolai Klimii Iter Subterraneum (work by Holberg)
Ludvig Holberg, Baron Holberg: …Nicolai Klimii Iter Subterraneum (1741; The Journey of Niels Klim to the World Underground). Niels Klim, originally written in Latin and published in Germany (by its Danish publisher, who wished to avoid censorship), was translated into Danish in 1742. It was adapted for Danish television into a feature-length film in…
- Nicolai, Carl Otto Ehrenfried (German composer)
Otto Nicolai was a German composer known for his comic opera Die lustigen Weiber von Windsor (The Merry Wives of Windsor), based on William Shakespeare’s comedy. In his youth Nicolai was exploited as a musical prodigy by his father. He studied in Berlin in 1827 and later under Giuseppe Baini in
- Nicolai, Christoph Friedrich (German writer)
Friedrich Nicolai was a writer and bookseller who, with Gotthold Ephraim Lessing and Moses Mendelssohn, was a leader of the German Enlightenment (Aufklärung) and who, as editor of the reformist journal Allgemeine deutsche Bibliothek (“German General Library”), was critical of such younger writers
- Nicolai, Christoph Friedrich (German writer)
Friedrich Nicolai was a writer and bookseller who, with Gotthold Ephraim Lessing and Moses Mendelssohn, was a leader of the German Enlightenment (Aufklärung) and who, as editor of the reformist journal Allgemeine deutsche Bibliothek (“German General Library”), was critical of such younger writers
- Nicolai, Friedrich (German writer)
Friedrich Nicolai was a writer and bookseller who, with Gotthold Ephraim Lessing and Moses Mendelssohn, was a leader of the German Enlightenment (Aufklärung) and who, as editor of the reformist journal Allgemeine deutsche Bibliothek (“German General Library”), was critical of such younger writers
- Nicolai, Otto (German composer)
Otto Nicolai was a German composer known for his comic opera Die lustigen Weiber von Windsor (The Merry Wives of Windsor), based on William Shakespeare’s comedy. In his youth Nicolai was exploited as a musical prodigy by his father. He studied in Berlin in 1827 and later under Giuseppe Baini in
- Nicolaïdes, Kimon (artist)
contour drawing: …contour drawing was popularized by Kimon Nicolaïdes in The Natural Way to Draw (1941).
- nicolaitism (religion)
history of Europe: From persuasion to coercion: The emergence of a new ecclesiastical discipline: …ecclesiastical office from laymen) and nicolaitism (clerical marriage). The increasingly precise exposition of Christian doctrine by 12th-century theologians seemed to many people a displacement of the Christianity that they had always understood and practiced. Legal collections began to treat various forms of doctrinal and devotional dissent as heresy, thus formulating…
- Nicolas-Favre disease (pathology)
lymphogranuloma venereum, infection of lymph vessels and lymph nodes by the microorganism Chlamydia trachomatis. Like chlamydia, which is also a disease caused by C. trachomatis, lymphogranuloma venereum is usually sexually transmitted. The disease produces swollen lymph nodes, ulcerations,
- Nicolaus Copernicus University (university, Poland)
Kujawsko-Pomorskie: Geography: Also in Toruń is Nicolaus Copernicus University, the largest university in northern Poland. The province contains some excellent examples of Romanesque architecture, notably the Church of the Holy Trinity in Strzelno, noted for its four original Romanesque pillars dating to the 12th century. The ancient Piast Route connects Kruszwica,…
- Nicolaus de Apulia (Italian sculptor)
Niccolò dell’Arca was an early Renaissance sculptor famed for his intensely expressionistic use of realism combined with southern Classicism and a plastic naturalism typical of the Burgundian School and especially the work of Claus Sluter. The Ragusa, Bari, and Apulia variants of his name suggest
- Nicolaus Lyranus (French biblical scholar)
Nicholas Of Lyra was an author of the first printed commentary on the Bible and one of the foremost Franciscan theologians and influential exegetes (biblical interpreters) of the Middle Ages. Becoming a Franciscan c. 1300, by 1309 Nicholas was a professor at the Sorbonne, where he taught for many
- Nicolay, John G. (American biographer)
biography: Informative biography: , 1890), by John G. Nicolay and John Hay, offer representative samples. In the 20th century such works as Edward Nehls’s, D.H. Lawrence: A Composite Biography (1957–59) and David Alec Wilson’s collection of the life records of Thomas Carlyle (1923–29), in six volumes, continue the traditions of this…
- Nicole D’Oresme (French bishop, scholar, and economist)
Nicholas Oresme was a French Roman Catholic bishop, scholastic philosopher, economist, and mathematician whose work provided some basis for the development of modern mathematics and science and of French prose, particularly its scientific vocabulary. It is known that Oresme was of Norman origin,
- Nicole, Pierre (French theologian)
Pierre Nicole was a French theologian, author, moralist, and controversialist whose writings, chiefly polemical, supported the Roman Catholic reform movement known as Jansenism. Educated in Paris, Nicole taught literature and philosophy at Port-Royal des Champs, a Cistercian abbey that was a
- Nicoleño (people)
Gabrielino: …apparently related, group was the Nicolino (Nicoleño, or San Nicolinos), who inhabited San Nicolas Island.
- Nicolet, Jean (French explorer)
Jean Nicolet was a French North American explorer who was the first known European to discover Lake Michigan and what is now the state of Wisconsin. The son of a dispatch carrier, Nicolet was 20 years old when he traveled to New France (Canada) at the request of Samuel de Champlain. He lived with a
- Nicoletti, Paolo (Italian philosopher)
Paul Of Venice was an Italian Augustinian philosopher and theologian who gained recognition as an educator and author of works on logic. Paul studied at the universities of Oxford and Padua, where he also lectured (1408–15), and became Venetian ambassador to Poland (1413), but difficulties with the
- Nicolino (people)
Gabrielino: …apparently related, group was the Nicolino (Nicoleño, or San Nicolinos), who inhabited San Nicolas Island.
- Nicolle, Charles-Jules-Henri (French bacteriologist)
Charles-Jules-Henri Nicolle was a French bacteriologist who received the 1928 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his discovery (1909) that typhus is transmitted by the body louse. After obtaining his medical degree in Paris in 1893, Nicolle returned to Rouen, where he became a member of the
- Nicollet, Jean-Nicolas (French scientist and explorer)
Joseph Nicolas Nicollet was a French mathematician and explorer. Nicollet showed promise in mathematics and astronomy early; he became a teacher of mathematics at the age of 19. In 1817 he began working with the scientist Pierre-Simon Laplace at the Paris Observatory, and in the 1820s he became a
- Nicollet, Joseph Nicolas (French scientist and explorer)
Joseph Nicolas Nicollet was a French mathematician and explorer. Nicollet showed promise in mathematics and astronomy early; he became a teacher of mathematics at the age of 19. In 1817 he began working with the scientist Pierre-Simon Laplace at the Paris Observatory, and in the 1820s he became a
- Nicollier, Claude (Swiss test pilot and astronaut)
Claude Nicollier is a Swiss test pilot and astronaut, the first Swiss citizen to travel into space. Nicollier qualified as a pilot in the Swiss air force in 1966. He earned a B.S. in physics from the University of Lausanne in 1970. He attended the Swiss Air Transport School in Zürich and qualified
- Nicolls, Richard (English governor)
Richard Nicolls was the first English governor of the province of New York in the American colonies. The son of a barrister, Nicolls was a stalwart Royalist who served in the army during the English Civil Wars and followed the Stuarts into exile, where he entered the service of James, Duke of York.
- Nicolò III (lord of Ferrara)
house of Este: Lords of Ferrara: The reign of Nicolò III (1393–1441), son of Alberto, marked the strengthening of Estensi domination in Ferrara and the introduction of Estensi influence generally in Italian politics. After having defeated an attempt by the Paduans to achieve hegemony in Ferrara, the Estensi duke became intermediary in the political…
- Nicolosi (Italy)
Mount Etna: Geology: …opened above the town of Nicolosi, widening into a chasm from which lava flowed and solid fragments, sand, and ashes were hurled. The latter formed a double cone more than 150 feet (46 metres) high, named Monti Rossi. The lava flow destroyed a dozen villages on the lower slope and…
- Nicolson, Sir Harold (British diplomat and author)
Sir Harold Nicolson was a British diplomat and author of more than 125 books, including political essays, travel accounts, and mystery novels. His three-volume Diaries and Letters (1966–68) is a valuable document of British social and political life from 1930 to 1964. Nicolson was born in Iran,
- Nicolson, Victoria Mary (British writer)
Vita Sackville-West was an English novelist and poet who wrote chiefly about the Kentish countryside, where she spent most of her life. She was the daughter of the 3rd Baron Sackville and a granddaughter of Pepita, a Spanish dancer, whose story she told in Pepita (1937). In 1913 she married Harold
- Nicomachean Ethics (work by Aristotle)
ethics: Aristotle: …most important ethical treatise, the Nicomachean Ethics, he sorts through the virtues as they were popularly understood in his day, specifying in each case what is truly virtuous and what is mistakenly thought to be so. Here he applies an idea that later came to be known as the Golden…
- Nicomachus (Greek physician)
Aristotle: The Academy: His father, Nicomachus, was the physician of Amyntas III (reigned c. 393–c. 370 bce), king of Macedonia and grandfather of Alexander the Great (reigned 336–323 bce). After his father’s death in 367, Aristotle migrated to Athens, where he joined the Academy of Plato (c. 428–c. 348 bce).…
- Nicomachus of Gerasa (Roman philosopher and mathematician)
Nicomachus of Gerasa was a Neo-Pythagorean philosopher and mathematician who wrote Arithmētikē eisagōgē (Introduction to Arithmetic), an influential treatise on number theory. Considered a standard authority for 1,000 years, the book sets out the elementary theory and properties of numbers and
- Nicomachus of Thebes (Greek artist)
Nicomachus of Thebes was a Greek painter known, according to Plutarch, for his facility, which Plutarch compared to that of Homer when composing verses. Nicomachus’s work was overshadowed by that of his great contemporaries, such as Apelles and Protogenes; however, the 1st-century-bc Roman
- Nicomède (play by Corneille)
Pierre Corneille: Contribution to comedy. of Pierre Corneille: …machinery was very important, and Nicomède (performed 1651) were all written during the political upheaval and civil war of the period known as the Fronde (1648–53), with Don Sanche in particular carrying contemporary political overtones. In 1651 or 1652 his play Pertharite seems to have been brutally received, and for…
- Nicomedes (Greek mathematician)
mathematics: Apollonius: …the conchoids were presented by Nicomedes (middle or late 3rd century bce), and their replacement by equivalent solid constructions appears to have come soon after, perhaps by Apollonius or his associates.
- Nicomedes III (king of Bithynia)
Mithradates VI Eupator: Life: and Galatia between himself and Nicomedes III of Bithynia, but next he quarreled with Nicomedes over Cappadocia. On two occasions he was successful at first but then deprived of his advantage by Roman intervention (c. 95 and 92). While appearing to acquiesce, he resolved to expel the Romans from Asia.…
- Nicomedes IV (king of Bithynia)
Mithradates VI Eupator: Life: A first attempt to depose Nicomedes IV of Bithynia, who was completely subservient to the Romans, was frustrated (c. 90). Then Nicomedes, instigated by Rome, attacked Pontic territory, and Mithradates, after protesting in vain to the Romans, finally declared war (88).
- Nicomedia (Turkey)
İzmit, city, northwestern Turkey. It lies near the head of İzmit Gulf of the Sea of Marmara. The city spreads across several hills and over a narrow plain that contains its commercial and industrial sections. Originally a Megarian city founded in the 8th century bce and called Astacus (or Olbia),
- Nicopolis (Bulgaria)
Nikopol, town, northern Bulgaria. It lies along the Danube River near its confluence with the Osŭm (Ossăm) and opposite Turnu Măgurele, Rom. Nikopol was an important Danubian stronghold—ruined fortresses still dominate the town—founded by the Byzantine emperor Heraclius I in ad 629. In 1396 the
- Nicopolis Actia (Greece)
Nicopolis Actia, city about 4 miles (6 km) north of Préveza, northwestern Greece, opposite Actium (now Áktion) at the mouth of the Ambracian Gulf (now Amvrakikós Gulf). It was founded in 31 bc by Octavian (who in 27 bc was to become the Roman emperor Augustus) in commemoration of his victory over