- Portrait of Maria Ivanovna Lopukhina (painting by Borovikovsky)
Vladimir Lukich Borovikovsky: …works of this period was Portrait of Maria Ivanovna Lopukhina (1797). In this work the calm, reposing position of her body stands in contrast to her delicately raised head, enchanting the viewer with the tenderness of her countenance and the profound seriousness, almost sadness, of her glance. The blossoming roses…
- Portrait of Mohammad II (work by Bellini)
Gentile Bellini: …Gentile painted there is the Portrait of Mohammad II (c. 1480), a masterful characterization of the shrewd, cultivated ruler. In his pen-and-gouache drawing Seated Scribe (1479–80), Gentile employs a flat patterned style similar to that of the Turkish miniatures that influenced such later works as his Portrait of Doge Giovanni…
- Portrait of Monsieur Bertin (work by Ingres)
Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres: Maturity: In 1832 he produced the Portrait of Monsieur Bertin, a pictorial paean to the tenacity of the newly empowered middle class. Ingres’s masterful characterization of his pugnacious sitter, along with the portrait’s mesmerizing realism, earned him popular as well as critical accolades at the 1833 Salon.
- Portrait of My Youth, A (work by Yi)
Yi Munyŏl: Chŏlmŭn nal ŭi ch’osang (1981; A Portrait of My Youth), a trilogy of novellas, recorded a young man’s Herculean efforts to overcome his romantic nihilism and his impulse to commit suicide. Hwagje-rŭl wihayŏ (1982; Hail to the Emperor!), a jeu d’esprit, is a rambunctious satire on imperial delusions that showcases…
- Portrait of Pablo Picasso in a Black Hat (painting by Maar)
Dora Maar: …to be his signature (Portrait of Pablo Picasso in a Black Hat [1939]). By 1944 relations between Maar and Picasso were strained, and the two became increasingly estranged. They separated completely in 1946. Maar, meanwhile, exhibited more frequently in the 1940s.
- Portrait of Pope Innocent X (work by Bacon)
Francis Bacon: …he converted Diego Velázquez’s famous Portrait of Pope Innocent X into a nightmarish icon of hysterical terror.
- Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, A (novel by Joyce)
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, autobiographical novel by James Joyce, published serially in The Egoist in 1914–15 and in book form in 1916; considered by many the greatest bildungsroman in the English language. The novel portrays the early years of Stephen Dedalus, who later reappeared as
- Portrait of the Artist as Filipino, A (novel by Joaquin)
Nick Joaquin: A Portrait of the Artist as Filipino (1966), a celebrated play, attempts to reconcile historical events with dynamic change. The Aquinos of Tarlac: An Essay on History as Three Generations (1983) presents a biography of Benigno Aquino, the assassinated presidential candidate. The action of the…
- Portrait of the Artist Surrounded by Masks (painting by Ensor)
James, Baron Ensor: …given frightening expression in his Portrait of the Artist Surrounded by Masks. He finally became a recluse and was seen in public so seldom that he was rumoured to be dead.
- Portrait of the Artist’s Mother (painting by James McNeill Whistler)
Arrangement in Grey and Black No. 1, oil painting created by American-born artist James McNeill Whistler in 1871. Widely known as The Artist’s Mother, it is not only the most famous work of the artist, it is one of the most recognized paintings in the world and has come to be regarded as an icon of
- Portrait of the World Before the War, 1890–1914, A (work by Tuchman)
Barbara Tuchman: Tuchman’s next book, The Proud Tower (1966), subtitled A Portrait of the World Before the War, 1890–1914, was a survey of European and American society, culture, and politics in the 1890s. She was awarded a second Pulitzer Prize for Stilwell and the American Experience in China, 1911–45 (1970).…
- Portrait of Ubu (photomontage by Maar)
Dora Maar: Portrait of Ubu (1936; also called Père Ubu), a monstrous close-up image by Maar of what may be an armadillo fetus (she would never confirm), became an icon of the movement.
- Portraits contemporains (work by Sainte-Beuve)
Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve: Early critical and historical writings: …contemporaries, as further collected in Portraits contemporains (1846), Sainte-Beuve became a member of the circle presided over by Mme Récamier, the famous hostess, and the writer and politician François-René de Chateaubriand. Sainte-Beuve greeted the appearance of Chateaubriand’s memoirs with enthusiasm, though a decade and a half later he was to…
- Portraits de peintres (work by Hahn)
Reynaldo Hahn: His piano suite Portraits de peintres was inspired by poems of Marcel Proust, who portrayed Hahn in his novel Jean Santeuil. Several of his exquisite art songs, such as “Si mes vers avaient des ailes” (“If my verse had wings”), remain in the concert repertory. Hahn’s music is…
- Portraits in Color (work by Ovington)
Mary White Ovington: She also wrote Portraits in Color (1927), a collection of short biographies of African American leaders, as well as several children’s books and a novel.
- Portraits of Federico da Montefeltro, Duke of Urbino and of His Wife, Battista Sforza (work by Piero della Francesca)
Piero della Francesca: Mature period: A famous diptych portrait of Duke Federico and his consort, Battista Sforza, was probably begun to commemorate their marriage in 1465. The paintings show Piero’s respect for visual fact in the unidealized features of the Duke and in the enchanting landscape backgrounds, which also indicate that he had…
- Portraits of Outstanding American Citizens of Negro Origin (work by Waring)
Laura Wheeler Waring: …Waring to paint the series Portraits of Outstanding American Citizens of Negro Origin. Among her well-known portrait subjects for this project were W.E.B. DuBois, George Washington Carver, Marian Anderson, and James Weldon Johnson. One year after her death, the Howard University Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., held an exhibit…
- Portraits of the Emperors (painting by Yan Liben)
Yan Liben: …important is the hand scroll Portraits of the Emperors, which depicts a series of emperors selected from about the preceding 800 years of history (only the last seven of the portraits are original; the first six were copies of earlier works). Yan Liben has imbued them with subtly defined characters…
- portraiture (art)
drawing: Charcoal: …has often been used for portrait drawings to preserve for the eventual painting pictorial tints that were already present in the preliminary sketch. When destined to be autonomous portraits, charcoal drawings are executed in detail; with their sharp accents and delicate modelling, such portraits cover the whole range of the…
- Portrush (Northern Ireland, United Kingdom)
Portrush, town, Causeway Coast and Glens district, northern Northern Ireland, lying at the northwestern end of the Antrim Coast Road, on the basaltic peninsula of Ramore Head. Offshore in the Atlantic Ocean are the Skerries, a rocky group of islets forming a natural breakwater. The headland, or
- Portsea Island (peninsula, England, United Kingdom)
Portsmouth: Portsmouth lies on Portsea Island, a narrow peninsula that separates two inlets of the English Channel: Portsmouth Harbour to the west and Langstone Harbour to the east. Portsmouth’s naval base and Royal Dockyard occupy the southwestern part of the peninsula, and Southsea lies on the peninsula’s southern tip.…
- Portsmouth (Ohio, United States)
Portsmouth, city, seat (1816) of Scioto county, southern Ohio, U.S. Portsmouth lies along the Ohio River at the mouth of the Scioto River, about 90 miles (145 km) south of Columbus. It was founded in 1803 by Maj. Henry Massie, a land speculator, who named the place for Portsmouth, N.H., hometown of
- Portsmouth (Rhode Island, United States)
Portsmouth, town (township), Newport county, southeastern Rhode Island, U.S. Portsmouth lies on the northern end of Rhode (Aquidneck) Island and along the Sakonnet River. It was founded in 1638 by William Coddington, John Clarke, Anne Hutchinson, and associates from the Massachusetts Bay colony and
- Portsmouth (Virginia, United States)
Portsmouth, independent city and port, southeastern Virginia, U.S. It lies on the south shore of the Elizabeth River, opposite the city of Norfolk (connected by two bridges). The Elizabeth River flows into Hampton Roads and forms part of a fine natural harbour there. Portsmouth was the seat of
- Portsmouth (England, United Kingdom)
Portsmouth, city and unitary authority, geographic and historic county of Hampshire, England. It is a major naval base and, with Southsea, a popular holiday resort. Portsmouth lies on Portsea Island, a narrow peninsula that separates two inlets of the English Channel: Portsmouth Harbour to the west
- Portsmouth (New Hampshire, United States)
Portsmouth, city, Rockingham county, southeastern New Hampshire, U.S., across the Piscataqua River from Kittery, Maine, on the Atlantic coast. It is New Hampshire’s oldest settlement, second oldest city, first capital, and only seaport. In 1623 a fishing settlement was built at the river’s mouth.
- Portsmouth Compact (United States history)
Portsmouth: The Portsmouth Compact, by which the settlers established a democratic government, is inscribed on a bronze and stone marker at Founder’s Brook. The settlement was incorporated as a town in 1640 and was probably renamed for Portsmouth, England; in that year it also entered into an…
- Portsmouth Harbour (harbour, Portsmouth, England, United Kingdom)
Portsmouth: …inlets of the English Channel: Portsmouth Harbour to the west and Langstone Harbour to the east. Portsmouth’s naval base and Royal Dockyard occupy the southwestern part of the peninsula, and Southsea lies on the peninsula’s southern tip. Portsmouth Harbour widens inward in bottle form, with Portsmouth on the east shore…
- Portsmouth Naval Shipyard (shipyard, Kittery, Maine, United States)
Kittery: The Portsmouth Naval Shipyard (1800), which from the mid-1950s to 1971 built nuclear submarines and now overhauls and repairs them, is in Kittery. The Treaty of Portsmouth (1905), ending the Russo-Japanese War, was signed there. Nearby in South Berwick is the birthplace of novelist Sarah Orne…
- Portsmouth Village (North Carolina, United States)
Cape Lookout National Seashore: Portsmouth Village, chartered in 1753 and now a restored village on the National Register of Historic Places, lies on the northern tip of North Core Banks. A lighthouse at Cape Lookout on the southern tip of South Core Banks dates to 1859 and is still…
- Portsmouth, Louise-Renée de Kéroualle, duchess of, countess of Fareham, Baroness Petersfield, Duchess d’Aubigny (French noble)
Louise-Renée de Kéroualle, duchess of Portsmouth was a French mistress of Charles II of Great Britain. She was the least popular with his subjects but the ablest politician. The daughter of a Breton nobleman, Guillaume de Penancoet, Sieur de Kéroualle, she entered the household of Henrietta Anne,
- Portsmouth, Louise-Renée de Kéroualle, Duchess of, Countess of Fareham, Baroness Petersfield, Duchesse d’Aubigny (French noble)
Louise-Renée de Kéroualle, duchess of Portsmouth was a French mistress of Charles II of Great Britain. She was the least popular with his subjects but the ablest politician. The daughter of a Breton nobleman, Guillaume de Penancoet, Sieur de Kéroualle, she entered the household of Henrietta Anne,
- Portsmouth, Treaty of (Japanese-Russian history)
Treaty of Portsmouth, (September 5 [August 23, Old Style], 1905), peace settlement signed at Kittery, Maine, in the U.S., ending the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–05. According to the terms of the treaty, which was mediated by U.S. Pres. Theodore Roosevelt, the defeated Russians recognized Japan as
- Portstewart (Northern Ireland, United Kingdom)
Coleraine: Portrush and Portstewart, located on the Atlantic coast northeast of the mouth of the Bann, are popular resort towns with a line of reefs known as The Skerries directly offshore. Area former district, 189 square miles (490 square km). Pop. (2001) town, 24,042; (2011) town, 24,630.
- Portucale (Portugal)
Porto, city and port, northern Portugal. The city lies along the Douro River, 2 miles (3 km) from the river’s mouth on the Atlantic Ocean and 175 miles (280 km) north of Lisbon. World-famous for its port wine, Porto is Portugal’s second largest city and is the commercial and industrial centre for
- Portugal
Portugal, country lying along the Atlantic coast of the Iberian Peninsula in southwestern Europe. Once continental Europe’s greatest power, Portugal shares commonalities—geographic and cultural—with the countries of both northern Europe and the Mediterranean. Its cold, rocky northern coast and
- Portugal Day (holiday)
Portugal: Daily life and social customs: …parades and various cultural events; Portugal Day (June 10), which commemorates the death of 16th-century soldier-poet Luís de Camões; and Republic Day (October 5), which celebrates the overthrow of the monarchy and the establishment of the republic in 1910.
- Portugal e o Futuro (work by Spínola)
Portugal: The Revolution of the Carnations: …February 1974 of the book Portugal e o futuro (“Portugal and the Future”) by the colonial war hero General António de Spínola, who argued that the wars in Africa could not be settled by force of arms and advocated negotiated autonomy for the colonies and an alternative to Caetano’s leadership.…
- Portugal Masters (golf tournament)
Padraig Harrington: …following year he won the Portugal Masters, his first win on the European Tour since 2008. Harrington competed at the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, where golf made its return after having been absent from the Games for more than a century, but he failed to win a medal.
- Portugal, flag of
vertically divided green-red national flag with a coat of arms centred on the line between the two colours. The width-to-length ratio of the flag is 2 to 3.According to legend, in 1139 Count Afonso Henriques won a decisive victory against Moorish forces at Ourique. The five shields he supposedly
- Portugal, history of
Portugal: History of Portugal: The earliest human remains found in Portugal are Neanderthal-type bones from Furninhas. A distinct culture first emerged in the Mesolithic (Middle Stone Age) middens of the lower Tagus valley, dated about 5500 bce. Neolithic (New Stone…
- Portugalete (Spain)
Portugalete, town, Vizcaya provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of the Basque Country, northern Spain. The town, a northwestern suburb of Bilbao, lies at the mouth of the Nervión River, on the western side of Bilbao Bay. It was founded in 1322 by María Díaz de
- Português
Portuguese language, Romance language that is spoken in Portugal, Brazil, and other Portuguese colonial and formerly colonial territories. Galician, spoken in northwestern Spain, is closely related to Portuguese. Portuguese owes its importance—as the second Romance language (after Spanish) in terms
- Portuguesa (state, Venezuela)
Portuguesa, estado (state), northwestern Venezuela. It is bordered by the states of Lara (north), Cojedes (east), Barinas (south), and Trujillo (west). The northwestern portion of the territory is in the Cordillera de Mérida, the rest being in the Llanos (plains). The main economic activity in
- Portuguese Airlines (Portuguese company)
Mozambique: Transportation and telecommunications: …but after World War II Portugal’s national airline opened a route between Beira and Maputo. Eventually colonial Mozambique developed its own airline. It was replaced in 1980 by Mozambique Airlines (Linhas Aéreas de Moçambique; LAM), the national carrier, which also provides international service. Mozambique has a number of domestic airports…
- Portuguese bullfighting (sport)
bullfighting: Development in the modern era: The opposite development occurred in Portugal. While mounted bullfighting waned in Spain and was transformed by the masses into the foot-based corrida common today, equestrian bullfighting was finely honed into an art and a national specialty in Portugal. The main performers in a Portuguese bullfight are the rejoneadores (lancers mounted…
- Portuguese court (Spanish and Portuguese parliament)
Cortes, a representative assembly, or parliament, of the medieval Iberian kingdoms and, in modern times, the national legislature of Spain and of Portugal. The Cortes developed in the Middle Ages when elected representatives of the free municipalities acquired the right to take part in the
- Portuguese East Africa
Mozambique, scenic country in southeastern Africa. Mozambique is rich in natural resources, is biologically and culturally diverse, and has a tropical climate. Its extensive coastline, fronting the Mozambique Channel, which separates mainland Africa from the island of Madagascar, offers some of
- Portuguese Guinea
Guinea-Bissau, country of western Africa. Situated on the Atlantic coast, the predominantly low-lying country is slightly hilly farther inland. The name Guinea remains a source of debate; it is perhaps a corruption of an Amazigh (Berber) word meaning “land of the blacks.” The country also uses the
- Portuguese India (historic region, India)
Portuguese India, name once used for those parts of India which were under Portuguese rule from 1505 to December 1961. Portuguese India consisted of several isolated tracts: (1) the territory of Goa with the capital, a considerable area in the middle of the west coast of India; (2) Damão, or Daman,
- Portuguese language
Portuguese language, Romance language that is spoken in Portugal, Brazil, and other Portuguese colonial and formerly colonial territories. Galician, spoken in northwestern Spain, is closely related to Portuguese. Portuguese owes its importance—as the second Romance language (after Spanish) in terms
- Portuguese literature
Portuguese literature, the body of writing in the Portuguese language produced by the peoples of Portugal, which includes the Madeira Islands and the Azores. The literature of Portugal is distinguished by a wealth and variety of lyric poetry, which has characterized it from the beginning of its
- Portuguese man-of-war (invertebrate)
Portuguese man-of-war, (Physalia physalis), species of jellylike marine animals of the order Siphonophora (class Hydrozoa, phylum Cnidaria) noted for its colonial body, floating habits, and powerful stings. It is often mistaken for a jellyfish. The Portuguese man-of-war’s prominent physical feature
- Portuguese oak (plant)
oak: Major species and uses: trojana), and Portuguese oak (Q. lusitanica). Popular Asian ornamentals include the blue Japanese oak (Q. glauca), daimyo oak (Q. dentata), Japanese evergreen oak (Q. acuta), and sawtooth oak (Q. acutissima). The English oak (Q. robur), a timber tree
- Portuguese Republic
Portugal, country lying along the Atlantic coast of the Iberian Peninsula in southwestern Europe. Once continental Europe’s greatest power, Portugal shares commonalities—geographic and cultural—with the countries of both northern Europe and the Mediterranean. Its cold, rocky northern coast and
- Portuguese Socialist Action (political party, Portugal)
Mário Soares: …which later transformed into the Portuguese Socialist Party (Partido Socialista Portuguesa). By the time the army-imposed right-wing dictatorship fell in 1974, Soares had been jailed 12 times and had twice experienced exile, in São Tomé (1968) and Paris (1970–74).
- Portuguese Socialist Party (political party, Portugal)
Mário Soares: …which later transformed into the Portuguese Socialist Party (Partido Socialista Portuguesa). By the time the army-imposed right-wing dictatorship fell in 1974, Soares had been jailed 12 times and had twice experienced exile, in São Tomé (1968) and Paris (1970–74).
- Portuguese sundew (plant)
carnivorous plant: Major families: Once classified within Droseraceae, the Portuguese sundew (Drosophyllum lusitanicum) is now placed within its own family, Drosophyllaceae (order Caryophyllales), of which it is the only species.
- Portuguese West Africa
Angola, country located in southwestern Africa. A large country, Angola takes in a broad variety of landscapes, including the semidesert Atlantic littoral bordering Namibia’s “Skeleton Coast,” the sparsely populated rainforest interior, the rugged highlands of the south, the Cabinda exclave in the
- Portuguese, The (painting by Braque)
Georges Braque: Cubism: …1911, he stenciled letters into The Portuguese.
- Portulaca (plant)
purslane, any of certain small, fleshy annual plants of the genus Portulaca (40–100 species), of the family Portulacaceae. The plants have prostrate, often reddish stems, with spoon-shaped leaves and flowers that open in the sunlight. The common purslane (P. oleracea), or pusley, is a widespread
- Portulaca grandiflora (plant, Portulaca grandiflora)
purslane: Rose moss (P. grandiflora), a trailing fleshy species, is cultivated as a garden ornamental for its brightly coloured, sometimes doubled flowers. All plants of the genus are known for their persistence; they grow well even in dry waste soil and can retain enough moisture to…
- Portulaca oleracea (plant)
purslane: The common purslane (P. oleracea), or pusley, is a widespread weed, recognizable by its small yellow flowers. P. oleracea sativa, known as kitchen garden pusley, is grown to some extent as a potherb, mostly in Europe. Rose moss (P. grandiflora), a trailing fleshy species, is cultivated…
- Portulaca oleracea sativa (plant)
purslane: oleracea sativa, known as kitchen garden pusley, is grown to some extent as a potherb, mostly in Europe. Rose moss (P. grandiflora), a trailing fleshy species, is cultivated as a garden ornamental for its brightly coloured, sometimes doubled flowers. All plants of the genus are known for their persistence;…
- Portulacaceae (plant family)
Portulacaceae, the purslane family of flowering plants, in the order Caryophyllales, with about 15 genera and 500 species of herbs or small shrubs, native primarily to the Pacific coast of North America and southern South America. Members of the family have leaves that often are fleshy and
- Portulacaria afra (plant)
purslane: The purslane tree (Portulacaria afra), native to South Africa, is a fleshy-leaved, soft-wooded tree up to 4 metres (13 feet) high. It is grown in California as a specimen plant for its succulent habit and its tiny pink flowers that grow in clusters; it is also…
- Portunidae (crustacean)
swimming crab, any member of the family Portunidae (order Decapoda of the class Crustacea, phylum Arthropoda). In these animals, the fifth (hindmost) pair of legs are flattened into paddles for swimming. The family includes the blue crab (Callinectes sapidus), an edible crab of the Atlantic coast
- Portunol (dialect)
Uruguay: Ethnic groups and languages: …often in a slang called portuñol, from the words português and español.
- Portuondo, Omara (Cuban singer)
Cuba: Music and dance: …Ibrahim Ferrer, Rubén González, and Omara Portuondo. Classical music is of relatively minor importance in Cuba, but there is a National Symphony Orchestra that also has a chamber orchestra and instrumental ensembles.
- Portus (ancient Rome)
Portus, harbour town of imperial Rome. The artificial harbour at Portus, constructed by the emperor Claudius I (ad 41–54) to replace Ostia (q.v.), was connected to Rome by canal and the Tiber River. After about 200 ships were lost in the harbour during a storm in ad 62, Trajan added a second
- portus (medieval settlement)
history of the Low Countries: Economy: Smaller trade settlements (portus, or vicus) emerged at Tournai, Ghent, Brugge, Antwerp, Dinant, Namur, Huy, Liège, and Maastricht—a clear indication of the commercial importance of the Schelde and the Meuse.
- Portus Albus (ancient Rome)
Algeciras: …the site of the Roman Portus Albus; its Arabic name, Al-Jazīrah al-Khaḍrāʾ, means Green Island, in reference to the offshore Isla Verde. The port was taken by Alfonso XI of Castile in 1344 and then was recaptured and destroyed in 1368 by the Moors. It was refounded in 1704 by…
- Portus Cale (Portugal)
Porto, city and port, northern Portugal. The city lies along the Douro River, 2 miles (3 km) from the river’s mouth on the Atlantic Ocean and 175 miles (280 km) north of Lisbon. World-famous for its port wine, Porto is Portugal’s second largest city and is the commercial and industrial centre for
- Portus Gaditanus (Spain)
Puerto Real, town, Cádiz provincia (province), in the Andalusia comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), southern Spain. It is on the north shore of the inner arm of the Bay of Cádiz and lies 5 miles (8 km) east of Cádiz. Known to the Romans, it was probably the most ancient trading station on
- Portus Magnus (ancient Rome)
Arzew: …near the ruined Roman settlement, Portus Magnus. Petrochemical products, esparto grass, salt (from Salines d’Arzew, 9 miles [11 km] south), wine, cereals, and cattle are exported, and there is some commercial fishing. Arzew is connected by pipelines with the Hassi RʾMel natural gas fields and the Hassi Messaoud oil fields.…
- Portus Magnus (Spain)
Almería, port city and capital of Almería provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Andalusia, southern Spain, on the Mediterranean Gulf of Almería. Known to the Romans as Portus Magnus and to the Moors as Al-Marīyah (“Mirror of the Sea”), it was captured by the
- Portus Magonis (Spain)
Maó, capital of Minorca Island, Balearic Islands provincia (province) and comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), Spain. It originated as the Mediterranean Portus Magonis, bearing the name of the Carthaginian general Mago. Under the Romans it was a municipium (privileged town). The Arab pirate
- Portus Menesthei (Spain)
El Puerto de Santa María, port city, Cádiz provincia (province), in the Andalusia comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), southern Spain, at the mouth of Guadalete River on the Bay of Cádiz, southwest of Jerez de la Frontera. The Roman Portus Menesthei, it was once the site of naval arsenals and
- Portus Naonis (Italy)
Pordenone, city, Friuli–Venezia Giulia regione, northeastern Italy. It lies along a small tributary of the Meduna River, southwest of Udine. Originating as the Roman and medieval river port of Portus Naonis, it was a bulwark of the Trevisani in their war against Aquileia until it was destroyed by
- Portus Victoriae (ancient Rome)
Santander: …of the Roman colony of Portus Victoriae. The centre of the lower town was rebuilt after it was destroyed by fire spread by a windstorm in 1941. Notable surviving buildings include the Magdalena Palace, presented by the town to King Alfonso XIII; a Gothic cathedral; the library of the contemporary…
- Portzamparc, Christian de (French architect and urban planner)
Christian de Portzamparc is a French architect and urban planner whose distinctly modern and elegant designs reflected his sensitivity to and understanding of the greater urban environment. He was the first French architect to win the Pritzker Prize (1994). Portzamparc’s interest in architecture
- Porus (Indian prince)
Porus was an Indian king who ruled the region between the Hydaspes (Jhelum) and Acesines (Chenab) rivers at the time of Alexander the Great’s invasion (327–326 bce) of the Punjab. Unlike his neighbour, Ambhi, the king of Taxila (Takshashila), Porus resisted Alexander. But with his elephants and
- porus opticus (anatomy)
human eye: The orbit: The optic foramen, the opening through which the optic nerve runs back into the brain and the large ophthalmic artery enters the orbit, is at the nasal side of the apex; the superior orbital fissure is a larger hole through which pass large veins and nerves.…
- Porvenir Massacre (massacre, Porvenir, Texas, United States [1918])
Porvenir Massacre, incident on January 28, 1918, in which Texas Rangers, white ranchers, and U.S. Cavalry soldiers executed 15 boys and men of Mexican descent living in Porvenir, Texas. It was one of many deadly confrontations along the Mexican-U.S. border in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
- Porvoo (Finland)
Porvoo, city, southern Finland, at the mouth of the Porvoo River on the Gulf of Finland, northeast of Helsinki. About one-third of the population is Swedish speaking. One of Finland’s oldest communities, it has been a trade centre since the early 14th century and received town rights in 1346. It
- Porvoo Diet (Finnish politics)
Finland: The era of bureaucracy: …was laid down by the Porvoo (Borgå) Diet in 1809. Finland was still formally a part of Sweden until the peace treaty of Hamina (Fredrikshamn) later that year, but most of the Finnish leaders had already grown tired of Swedish control and wanted to acquire as much self-government as possible…
- Porzana (bird genus)
crake: The most widespread genus is Porzana (13 species), typified by the spotted crake (P. porzana) found in Europe and eastward to Mongolia; in winter it reaches southern Asia and northern Africa. It is a brown bird 25 cm (10 inches) long with a light-spotted breast and buffy undertail. Its New…
- Porzana carolina (bird)
crake: …New World counterpart is the sora, or Carolina rail (P. carolina). The sora is about 23 cm (9 inches) long and grayish brown with black on the face and throat, with a short yellow bill. Other Porzana species are Baillon’s crake (P. pusilla), occurring in parts of Europe, Asia, Africa,…
- Porzana parva (bird)
crake: …to the Philippines; and the little crake (P. parva), a relatively common Eurasian form.
- Porzana porzana (bird)
crake: … (13 species), typified by the spotted crake (P. porzana) found in Europe and eastward to Mongolia; in winter it reaches southern Asia and northern Africa. It is a brown bird 25 cm (10 inches) long with a light-spotted breast and buffy undertail. Its New World counterpart is the sora, or…
- Porzellan Manufaktur Nymphenburg (factory, Munich, Germany)
pottery: Pottery factories: …Nymphenburg, at Munich, now the Porzellan Manufaktur Nymphenburg. At the beginning of the 20th century, it began to use a wider range of underglaze colours with the aid of colour chemists from Sèvres and, about the same time, reissued some of the old figures and services of Bustelli and Auliczek…
- Posada, José Guadalupe (Mexican printmaker)
José Guadalupe Posada was a printmaker whose works, often expressionistic in content and style, were influential in the development of 20th-century graphic art. As a child, Posada worked as a farm laborer and in a pottery factory. He taught school for a short time and then began to draw, inspired
- Posadas (Argentina)
Posadas, city, capital of Misiones provincia (province), northeastern Argentina. Situated in the western corner of the province, it is bordered (north and east) by the Paraná River, which separates it from Encarnación, Paraguay. The settlement originated as a Paraguayan trading post and river port,
- Posadas (Christmas morality play)
Native American dance: Mexico and Mesoamerica: Posadas and pastorelas are danced episodes of the Christmastime coloquio de los pastores (“shepherds’ play”). Most popular in southern and central Mexico and the U.S. states of New Mexico and Texas, the posadas are generally processions by city boys and girls who go from house…
- poṣadha (Jainism)
Paryuṣaṇa: …of monks, an observance called poṣadha. The fourth day of Paryuṣaṇa coincides with the birth anniversary of Mahāvīra.
- posadha (Buddhism)
uposatha, fortnightly meetings of the Buddhist monastic assembly, at the times of the full moon and the new moon, to reaffirm the rules of discipline. The uposatha observance, now confined almost entirely to the Theravāda (“Way of the Elders”) tradition of Southeast Asia, can be traced back to
- posaune (musical instrument)
trombone, brass wind musical instrument sounded by lip vibration against a cup mouthpiece. It has an extendable slide that can increase the length of the instrument’s tubing. The slide thus performs the function of the valves on other brass instruments. From the 19th century, some trombones have
- Poseidon (Greek mythology)
Poseidon, in ancient Greek religion, god of the sea (and of water generally), earthquakes, and horses. He is distinguished from Pontus, the personification of the sea and the oldest Greek divinity of the waters. The name Poseidon means either “husband of the earth” or “lord of the earth.”
- Poseidon Adventure, The (film by Neame [1972])
Jack Albertson: …in the popular disaster movie The Poseidon Adventure (1972). He also had guest roles in dozens of TV series and variety shows as well as several made-for-television movies. He showed his versatility as an actor by garnering awards in three media; he won a Tony Award in 1965 for his…
- Poseidon missile (military technology)
Poseidon missile, U.S. submarine-launched ballistic missile introduced in 1971 to replace the Polaris missile. The two-stage Poseidon had about the same range as its predecessor (2,800 miles [4,500 km]), but it could carry up to 14 independently targetable nuclear warheads and deliver them with