- Philidor, Michel (French musician)
oboe: court musicians, Jacques Hotteterre and Michel Philidor. It was intended to be played indoors with stringed instruments and was softer and less brilliant in tone than the modern oboe. By the end of the 17th century it was the principal wind instrument of the orchestra and military band and, after…
- Philikí Etaireía (Greek revolutionary society)
Philikí Etaireía, (Greek: Friendly Brotherhood), Greek revolutionary secret society founded by merchants in Odessa in 1814 to overthrow Ottoman rule in southeastern Europe and to establish an independent Greek state. The society’s claim of Russian support and the romance of its commitment (each
- Philinoglossacea (gastropod order)
gastropod: Classification: Order Philinoglossacea No head appendages; gill lacking; no external shell; 2 families. Order Anaspidea Shell reduced to flat plate; feed on large seaweed rather than microscopic algae; sea hares (Aplysiidae); 1 other small family. Order Notaspidea Shell and gill
- Philinte de Molière, Le (play by Fabre d’Eglantine)
Philippe Fabre d’Églantine: …many comedies, the most celebrated—Le Philinte de Molière (1790), a sequel to Molière’s Misanthrope—in which the major characters are drawn as a politically dangerous aristocrat and a virtuous Republican. His best-known work is the song “Il pleut, il pleut, bergère” (“It’s raining, it’s raining, shepherdess”), a song which French…
- Philip (king of Germany)
Philip was a German Hohenstaufen king whose rivalry for the crown involved him in a decade of warfare with the Welf Otto IV. The youngest son of the Holy Roman emperor Frederick I Barbarossa, Philip was destined for the church. After being provost of the cathedral at Aachen, he was, in 1190 or
- Philip (British prince)
Philip, duke of Edinburgh was the husband of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom. Philip’s father was Prince Andrew of Greece and Denmark (1882–1944), a younger son of King George I of the Hellenes (originally Prince William of Denmark). His mother was Princess Alice (1885–1969), who was the
- Philip (Christian Apostle)
Saint Philip the Apostle ; Western feast day May 3, Eastern feast day November 14) was one of the Twelve Apostles. Mentioned only by name in the Apostle lists of the Synoptic Gospels, he is a frequent character in the Gospel According to John, according to which (1:43–51) he came from Bethsaida,
- Philip (Roman emperor)
Philip was a Roman emperor from 244 to 249. A member of a distinguished equestrian family of Arab descent, Philip was praetorian prefect when the emperor Gordian III was killed in a mutiny (perhaps with Philip’s connivance). Philip became emperor and quickly concluded a peace ending a war with
- Philip (king of Judaea)
Philip was the son of Herod I the Great and Cleopatra of Jerusalem (not to be confused with another Herod Philip, son of Herod I the Great by Mariamne II). He ruled ably as tetrarch over the former northeastern quarter of his father’s kingdom of Judaea. When the Roman emperor Augustus adjusted
- Philip (antipope)
Philip was an antipope in July 768. Temporal rulers coveted the papal throne following the death of Pope St. Paul I, and Toto, duke of Nepi, had his brother Constantine II, a layman, elected pope. The Lombard king Desiderius then sent troops to Rome, killing Toto and deposing Constantine. Backed by
- Philip (landgrave of Hesse)
Philip was the landgrave (Landgraf) of Hesse (1509–67), one of the great figures of German Protestantism, who championed the independence of German princes against the Holy Roman emperor Charles V. Philip was the son of Landgrave William II, an austere cultivated man and an experienced soldier. He
- Philip (count of Flanders)
Flanders: …Alsace (1128–68) and his son Philip (1168–91).
- Philip Augustus (king of France)
Philip II was the first of the great Capetian kings of medieval France (reigned 1180–1223), who gradually reconquered the French territories held by the kings of England and also furthered the royal domains northward into Flanders and southward into Languedoc. He was a major figure in the Third
- Philip Hurepel (French prince)
Blanche Of Castile: …the great barons, organized by Philip Hurepel, the illegitimate son of King Philip II Augustus, and supported by King Henry III of England. In the face of such adversity, Blanche showed herself by turns a delicate diplomat, a clever negotiator, and a strong leader. Dressed in white, on a white…
- Philip I (duke of Burgundy)
Philip I was the last Capetian duke of Burgundy (1349–61) and count of Boulogne and Artois. Son of Philip of Burgundy, he inherited the duchy upon the death of his grandfather, Eudes IV, and inherited the countships upon the death of his grandmother, Joan of France. His mother, Joan of Boulogne,
- Philip I (king of Castile)
Philip I was the king of Castile for less than a month before his death and the founder of the Habsburg dynasty in Spain. Philip was the son of the future Holy Roman emperor Maximilian I of Habsburg and Mary of Burgundy. At his mother’s death (1482) he succeeded to her Netherlands dominions, with
- Philip I (king of France)
Philip I was the king of France (1059–1108) who came to the throne at a time when the Capetian monarchy was extremely weak but who succeeded in enlarging the royal estates and treasury by a policy of devious alliances, the sale of his neutrality in the quarrels of powerful vassals, and the practice
- Philip I (king of Spain and Portugal)
Philip II was the king of the Spaniards (1556–98) and king of the Portuguese (as Philip I, 1580–98), champion of the Roman Catholic Counter-Reformation. During his reign the Spanish empire attained its greatest power, extent, and influence, though he failed to suppress the revolt of the Netherlands
- Philip II (king of France)
Philip II was the first of the great Capetian kings of medieval France (reigned 1180–1223), who gradually reconquered the French territories held by the kings of England and also furthered the royal domains northward into Flanders and southward into Languedoc. He was a major figure in the Third
- Philip II (king of Spain and Portugal)
Philip III was the king of Spain and of Portugal (as Philip II) whose reign (1598–1621) was characterized by a successful peaceful foreign policy in western Europe and internally by the expulsion of the Moriscos (Christians of Moorish ancestry) and government by the king’s favourites. Philip was
- Philip II (king of Macedonia)
Philip II was the 18th king of Macedonia (359–336 bce), who restored internal peace to his country and by 339 had gained domination over all of Greece by military and diplomatic means, thus laying the foundations for its expansion under his son Alexander III the Great. Philip was a son of Amyntas
- Philip II (duke of Burgundy)
Philip II was the duke of Burgundy (1363–1404) and the youngest son of the French king John II the Good. One of the most powerful men of his day in France, he was for a time regent for his nephew Charles VI; and when Charles went insane, he became the virtual ruler of France. John II’s grant of the
- Philip II (painting by Titian)
Titian: Portraits: …his greatest state portraits, the Philip II in full length. In this portrait of Philip, when still a prince aged 23, Titian achieved another tour de force in sheer beauty of painting, and he treated gently the surly face of the arrogant young man.
- Philip II (king of Spain and Portugal)
Philip II was the king of the Spaniards (1556–98) and king of the Portuguese (as Philip I, 1580–98), champion of the Roman Catholic Counter-Reformation. During his reign the Spanish empire attained its greatest power, extent, and influence, though he failed to suppress the revolt of the Netherlands
- Philip III (king of France)
Philip III was the king of France (1270–85), in whose reign the power of the monarchy was enlarged and the royal domain extended, though his foreign policy and military ventures were largely unsuccessful. Philip, the second son of Louis IX of France (Saint Louis), became heir to the throne on the
- Philip III (king of Spain and Portugal)
Philip III was the king of Spain and of Portugal (as Philip II) whose reign (1598–1621) was characterized by a successful peaceful foreign policy in western Europe and internally by the expulsion of the Moriscos (Christians of Moorish ancestry) and government by the king’s favourites. Philip was
- Philip III (duke of Burgundy)
Philip III was the most important of the Valois dukes of Burgundy (reigned 1419–67) and the true founder of the Burgundian state that rivaled France in the 15th century. Philip was the son of John the Fearless and Margaret of Bavaria. When he became duke of Burgundy at the age of 23, his first aim
- Philip III (king of Spain and Portugal)
Philip IV was the king of Spain (1621–65) and of Portugal (1621–40), during the decline of Spain as a great world power. He succeeded his father, Philip III of Spain, in 1621, and, for the first 22 years of his reign, Philip’s valido, or chief minister, was the Conde-Duque de Olivares, who took the
- Philip III (king of Spain and Portugal)
Philip IV was the king of Spain (1621–65) and of Portugal (1621–40), during the decline of Spain as a great world power. He succeeded his father, Philip III of Spain, in 1621, and, for the first 22 years of his reign, Philip’s valido, or chief minister, was the Conde-Duque de Olivares, who took the
- Philip III Arrhidaeus (king of Macedonia)
Argead Dynasty: …Alexander’s two successors, his half-brother Philip III Arrhidaeus and his son Alexander IV, furnished a nominal focus for loyalty until about 311, the real power in the empire lay in other hands.
- Philip Island (island, territory of Norfolk Island, Australia)
Norfolk Island: Geography: Two smaller islands, Philip (a volcanic pinnacle rising to 900 feet [275 m]) and Nepean (a limestone formation), lie off the southern shore. Although much of the land has been cleared for cropping and pasture, the once-dominant Norfolk Island pines (species Araucaria excelsa, or A. heterophylla) remain a…
- Philip IV (king of Spain and Portugal)
Philip IV was the king of Spain (1621–65) and of Portugal (1621–40), during the decline of Spain as a great world power. He succeeded his father, Philip III of Spain, in 1621, and, for the first 22 years of his reign, Philip’s valido, or chief minister, was the Conde-Duque de Olivares, who took the
- Philip IV (king of France)
Philip IV was the king of France from 1285 to 1314 (and of Navarre, as Philip I, from 1284 to 1305, ruling jointly with his wife, Joan I of Navarre). His long struggle with the Roman papacy ended with the transfer of the Curia to Avignon, France (beginning the so-called Babylonian Captivity,
- Philip Morris Companies Inc. (American company)
Altria Group, American holding company founded in 1985, the owner of several major American companies with interests in tobacco products and wine, most notably Philip Morris Inc., the largest cigarette manufacturer in the United States. Its headquarters are in Richmond, Virginia. The ancestor of
- Philip Morris Inc. (American company)
Altria Group: … products and wine, most notably Philip Morris Inc., the largest cigarette manufacturer in the United States. Its headquarters are in Richmond, Virginia.
- Philip of Alsace (count of Flanders)
Thierry: …the countship to his son Philip of Alsace and betook himself once more to Jerusalem. On his return from the East, Thierry retired to a monastery.
- Philip of Anjou (king of Spain)
Philip V was the king of Spain from 1700 (except for a brief period from January to August 1724) and founder of the Bourbon dynasty in Spain. During his reign, Spain regained much of its former influence in international affairs. Philip was a son of the dauphin Louis (son of Louis XIV of France)
- Philip of Heinsberg (archbishop of Cologne)
Germany: Hohenstaufen policy in Italy: …instance, Rainald of Dassel and Philip of Heinsberg, archbishops of Cologne from 1159 to 1167 and from 1167 to 1191, respectively, as archchancellors for Italy, had a vested interest in it. The support of the lay princes, conversely, was fitful and sporadic. Even at critical moments they could not be…
- Philip of Hesse (landgrave of Hesse)
Philip was the landgrave (Landgraf) of Hesse (1509–67), one of the great figures of German Protestantism, who championed the independence of German princes against the Holy Roman emperor Charles V. Philip was the son of Landgrave William II, an austere cultivated man and an experienced soldier. He
- Philip of Macedon (king of Macedonia)
Philip II was the 18th king of Macedonia (359–336 bce), who restored internal peace to his country and by 339 had gained domination over all of Greece by military and diplomatic means, thus laying the foundations for its expansion under his son Alexander III the Great. Philip was a son of Amyntas
- Philip of Pokanoket (Wampanoag leader)
Metacom was a sachem (intertribal leader) of a confederation of indigenous peoples that included the Wampanoag and Narraganset. Metacom led one of the most costly wars of resistance in New England history, known as King Philip’s War (1675–76). Metacom was the second son of Massasoit, a Wampanoag
- Philip of Rouvres (duke of Burgundy)
Philip I was the last Capetian duke of Burgundy (1349–61) and count of Boulogne and Artois. Son of Philip of Burgundy, he inherited the duchy upon the death of his grandfather, Eudes IV, and inherited the countships upon the death of his grandmother, Joan of France. His mother, Joan of Boulogne,
- Philip of Swabia (king of Germany)
Philip was a German Hohenstaufen king whose rivalry for the crown involved him in a decade of warfare with the Welf Otto IV. The youngest son of the Holy Roman emperor Frederick I Barbarossa, Philip was destined for the church. After being provost of the cathedral at Aachen, he was, in 1190 or
- Philip of Valois (king of France)
Philip VI was the first French king of the Valois dynasty. Reigning at the outbreak of the Hundred Years’ War (1337–1453), he had no means of imposing on his country the measures necessary for the maintenance of his monarchical power, though he continued the efforts of the 13th-century Capetians
- Philip the Apostle, Saint (Christian Apostle)
Saint Philip the Apostle ; Western feast day May 3, Eastern feast day November 14) was one of the Twelve Apostles. Mentioned only by name in the Apostle lists of the Synoptic Gospels, he is a frequent character in the Gospel According to John, according to which (1:43–51) he came from Bethsaida,
- Philip the Arabian (Roman emperor)
Philip was a Roman emperor from 244 to 249. A member of a distinguished equestrian family of Arab descent, Philip was praetorian prefect when the emperor Gordian III was killed in a mutiny (perhaps with Philip’s connivance). Philip became emperor and quickly concluded a peace ending a war with
- Philip the Bastard (fictional character)
King John: … (formerly Eleanor of Aquitaine), and Philip the Bastard, who supports the king and yet mocks all political and moral pretensions.
- Philip the Bold (duke of Burgundy)
Philip II was the duke of Burgundy (1363–1404) and the youngest son of the French king John II the Good. One of the most powerful men of his day in France, he was for a time regent for his nephew Charles VI; and when Charles went insane, he became the virtual ruler of France. John II’s grant of the
- Philip the Bold (king of France)
Philip III was the king of France (1270–85), in whose reign the power of the monarchy was enlarged and the royal domain extended, though his foreign policy and military ventures were largely unsuccessful. Philip, the second son of Louis IX of France (Saint Louis), became heir to the throne on the
- Philip the Deacon (Christian saint)
Saint Philip the Evangelist ; feast day June 6) was, in the early Christian church, one of the seven deacons appointed to tend the Christians of Jerusalem, thereby enabling the Apostles to freely conduct their missions. His energetic preaching, however, earned him the title of Philip the Evangelist
- Philip The Evangelist, Saint (Christian saint)
Saint Philip the Evangelist ; feast day June 6) was, in the early Christian church, one of the seven deacons appointed to tend the Christians of Jerusalem, thereby enabling the Apostles to freely conduct their missions. His energetic preaching, however, earned him the title of Philip the Evangelist
- Philip the Fair (king of France)
Philip IV was the king of France from 1285 to 1314 (and of Navarre, as Philip I, from 1284 to 1305, ruling jointly with his wife, Joan I of Navarre). His long struggle with the Roman papacy ended with the transfer of the Curia to Avignon, France (beginning the so-called Babylonian Captivity,
- Philip the Good (duke of Burgundy)
Philip III was the most important of the Valois dukes of Burgundy (reigned 1419–67) and the true founder of the Burgundian state that rivaled France in the 15th century. Philip was the son of John the Fearless and Margaret of Bavaria. When he became duke of Burgundy at the age of 23, his first aim
- Philip the Handsome (king of Castile)
Philip I was the king of Castile for less than a month before his death and the founder of the Habsburg dynasty in Spain. Philip was the son of the future Holy Roman emperor Maximilian I of Habsburg and Mary of Burgundy. At his mother’s death (1482) he succeeded to her Netherlands dominions, with
- Philip the Magnanimous (landgrave of Hesse)
Philip was the landgrave (Landgraf) of Hesse (1509–67), one of the great figures of German Protestantism, who championed the independence of German princes against the Holy Roman emperor Charles V. Philip was the son of Landgrave William II, an austere cultivated man and an experienced soldier. He
- Philip the Tall (king of France)
Philip V was the king of France (from 1316) and king of Navarre (as Philip II, from 1314), who largely succeeded in restoring the royal power to what it had been under his father, Philip IV. Philip was the second son of Philip IV, who made him count of Poitiers in 1311. When his elder brother, King
- Philip the Tetrarch (king of Judaea)
Philip was the son of Herod I the Great and Cleopatra of Jerusalem (not to be confused with another Herod Philip, son of Herod I the Great by Mariamne II). He ruled ably as tetrarch over the former northeastern quarter of his father’s kingdom of Judaea. When the Roman emperor Augustus adjusted
- Philip V (king of Macedonia)
Philip V was the king of Macedonia from 221 to 179, whose attempt to extend Macedonian influence throughout Greece resulted in his defeat by Rome. His career is significant mainly as an episode in Rome’s expansion. The son of Demetrius II and his wife Phthia (Chryseis), the young prince was
- Philip V (king of France)
Philip V was the king of France (from 1316) and king of Navarre (as Philip II, from 1314), who largely succeeded in restoring the royal power to what it had been under his father, Philip IV. Philip was the second son of Philip IV, who made him count of Poitiers in 1311. When his elder brother, King
- Philip V (king of Spain)
Philip V was the king of Spain from 1700 (except for a brief period from January to August 1724) and founder of the Bourbon dynasty in Spain. During his reign, Spain regained much of its former influence in international affairs. Philip was a son of the dauphin Louis (son of Louis XIV of France)
- Philip VI (king of France)
Philip VI was the first French king of the Valois dynasty. Reigning at the outbreak of the Hundred Years’ War (1337–1453), he had no means of imposing on his country the measures necessary for the maintenance of his monarchical power, though he continued the efforts of the 13th-century Capetians
- Philip William (prince of Orange)
Netherlands: The formation of a new government: …I’s second son (the first, Philip William, became prince of Orange and remained loyal to Spain), who was named stadtholder of Holland and Zeeland and became the commander of the republic’s armies. The result was a series of military triumphs over the Spanish forces under Alessandro Farnese, duke di Parma…
- Philip, Danny (prime minister of Solomon Islands)
Solomon Islands: Efforts toward recovery and reform and the 2006 and 2010 general elections: …in August 2010, after which Danny Philip, the leader of a parliamentary coalition, became prime minister. Philip stated that constitutional reform would be a priority of his administration, but he left before it could be completed, resigning a little more than a year later in the face of corruption allegations.…
- Philip, duke of Edinburgh (British prince)
Philip, duke of Edinburgh was the husband of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom. Philip’s father was Prince Andrew of Greece and Denmark (1882–1944), a younger son of King George I of the Hellenes (originally Prince William of Denmark). His mother was Princess Alice (1885–1969), who was the
- Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, Earl of Merioneth and Baron Greenwich, Prince (British prince)
Philip, duke of Edinburgh was the husband of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom. Philip’s father was Prince Andrew of Greece and Denmark (1882–1944), a younger son of King George I of the Hellenes (originally Prince William of Denmark). His mother was Princess Alice (1885–1969), who was the
- Philip, Gospel of (biblical literature)
biblical literature: Gospels: …account of the Resurrection; the Gospel of Philip, a Valentinian gnostic treatise; the Gospel of Thomas, published in 1959 and containing “the secret sayings of Jesus” (Greek fragments in Oxyrhynchus papyri 1, 654, and 655); and the Infancy Gospel of Thomas. Beyond these lie gospels ascribed to famous women, namely…
- Philip, Hugh (British club maker)
golf: Early clubs: …the early 19th century were Hugh Philip at St. Andrews and the McEwan brothers of Musselburgh, notably Douglas, whose clubs were described as models of symmetry and shape. They were artists at a time when clubs were passing from “rude and clumsy bludgeons” to a new and handsome look.
- Philip, John (Scottish missionary)
John Philip was a Scottish missionary in Southern Africa who championed the rights of the Africans against the European settlers. In 1818, at the invitation of the London Missionary Society (now Council for World Mission), Philip left his congregation in Aberdeen, where he had served since 1804, to
- Philip, King (Wampanoag leader)
Metacom was a sachem (intertribal leader) of a confederation of indigenous peoples that included the Wampanoag and Narraganset. Metacom led one of the most costly wars of resistance in New England history, known as King Philip’s War (1675–76). Metacom was the second son of Massasoit, a Wampanoag
- Philip, Marlene Nourbese (Canadian poet)
Canadian literature: Poetry and poetics: …Language Is Neutral (1990) and Marlene Nourbese Philip’s She Tries Her Tongue, Her Silence Softly Breaks (1988) challenge the colonization, sexism, and racism of the English language, while George Elliott Clarke’s collage Whylah Falls (1990) uncovers the life of Canadian blacks in a 1930s Nova Scotia village. In mapping arrivals…
- Philip, prince of Greece and Denmark (British prince)
Philip, duke of Edinburgh was the husband of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom. Philip’s father was Prince Andrew of Greece and Denmark (1882–1944), a younger son of King George I of the Hellenes (originally Prince William of Denmark). His mother was Princess Alice (1885–1969), who was the
- Philip, Saint (Christian Apostle)
Saint Philip the Apostle ; Western feast day May 3, Eastern feast day November 14) was one of the Twelve Apostles. Mentioned only by name in the Apostle lists of the Synoptic Gospels, he is a frequent character in the Gospel According to John, according to which (1:43–51) he came from Bethsaida,
- Philipe, Gérard (French actor)
Gérard Philipe was one of France’s most popular and versatile actors, whose brilliant performances on both stage and screen established his international reputation. Philipe attended the Conservatory of Dramatic Art in Paris and made his debut in Nice at the age of 19. Consequently, he was invited
- Philipon, Charles (French caricaturist)
Charles Philipon was a French caricaturist, lithographer, and liberal journalist who made caricatures a regular journalistic feature. Philipon settled in Paris in 1823, took to lithography, and began to draw caricatures for a living. He was an excellent draftsman with a fertile and irrepressible
- Philipp der Grossmütige (landgrave of Hesse)
Philip was the landgrave (Landgraf) of Hesse (1509–67), one of the great figures of German Protestantism, who championed the independence of German princes against the Holy Roman emperor Charles V. Philip was the son of Landgrave William II, an austere cultivated man and an experienced soldier. He
- Philipp von Schwaben (king of Germany)
Philip was a German Hohenstaufen king whose rivalry for the crown involved him in a decade of warfare with the Welf Otto IV. The youngest son of the Holy Roman emperor Frederick I Barbarossa, Philip was destined for the church. After being provost of the cathedral at Aachen, he was, in 1190 or
- Philipp, Isidor (French musician)
Isidor Philipp was a French pianist who had a long, highly successful tenure at the Paris Conservatoire. Philipp was brought to Paris as an infant. As a piano student of Georges Mathias at the Conservatoire, he won the first prize in 1883. After study with Saint-Saëns and Stephen Heller, he began a
- Philippa Of Hainaut (queen of England)
Philippa Of Hainaut was the queen consort of King Edward III of England (ruled 1327–77); her popularity helped Edward maintain peace in England during his long reign. Philippa’s father was William the Good, graaf van Hainaut (in modern Belgium) and Holland, and her mother, Jeanne de Valois, was the
- Philippe Auguste (king of France)
Philip II was the first of the great Capetian kings of medieval France (reigned 1180–1223), who gradually reconquered the French territories held by the kings of England and also furthered the royal domains northward into Flanders and southward into Languedoc. He was a major figure in the Third
- Philippe de Rouvres (duke of Burgundy)
Philip I was the last Capetian duke of Burgundy (1349–61) and count of Boulogne and Artois. Son of Philip of Burgundy, he inherited the duchy upon the death of his grandfather, Eudes IV, and inherited the countships upon the death of his grandmother, Joan of France. His mother, Joan of Boulogne,
- Philippe de Thaon (French author)
Anglo-Norman literature: Political and historical writings.: …the earliest writers in Anglo-Norman, Philippe de Thaon, or Thaün, wrote Li Cumpoz (The Computus), the first French bestiary, and a work on precious stones. Simund de Freine based his Roman de philosophie on Boethius, to whom the 13th-century Petite Philosophie also owes much.
- Philippe de Thaün (French author)
Anglo-Norman literature: Political and historical writings.: …the earliest writers in Anglo-Norman, Philippe de Thaon, or Thaün, wrote Li Cumpoz (The Computus), the first French bestiary, and a work on precious stones. Simund de Freine based his Roman de philosophie on Boethius, to whom the 13th-century Petite Philosophie also owes much.
- Philippe de Valois (king of France)
Philip VI was the first French king of the Valois dynasty. Reigning at the outbreak of the Hundred Years’ War (1337–1453), he had no means of imposing on his country the measures necessary for the maintenance of his monarchical power, though he continued the efforts of the 13th-century Capetians
- Philippe Egalité (French prince)
Louis-Philippe-Joseph, duc d’Orléans was a Bourbon prince who became a supporter of popular democracy during the Revolution of 1789. The cousin of King Louis XVI (ruled 1774–92) and the son of Louis-Philippe (later duc d’Orléans), he became duc de Chartres in 1752 and succeeded to his father’s
- Philippe II et la Franche-Comte: etude d’histoire politique, religieuse et sociale (work by Febvre)
Lucien Paul Victor Febvre: His first books, Philippe II et la Franche-Comté: étude d’histoire politique, religieuse et sociale (1911), a brilliant local as well as global study of an isolated, strife-ridden province during the second half of the 16th century, and Histoire de Franche-Comté (1912), a broad investigation of the region based…
- Philippe le Bel (king of France)
Philip IV was the king of France from 1285 to 1314 (and of Navarre, as Philip I, from 1284 to 1305, ruling jointly with his wife, Joan I of Navarre). His long struggle with the Roman papacy ended with the transfer of the Curia to Avignon, France (beginning the so-called Babylonian Captivity,
- Philippe le Bon (duke of Burgundy)
Philip III was the most important of the Valois dukes of Burgundy (reigned 1419–67) and the true founder of the Burgundian state that rivaled France in the 15th century. Philip was the son of John the Fearless and Margaret of Bavaria. When he became duke of Burgundy at the age of 23, his first aim
- Philippe le Hardi (king of France)
Philip III was the king of France (1270–85), in whose reign the power of the monarchy was enlarged and the royal domain extended, though his foreign policy and military ventures were largely unsuccessful. Philip, the second son of Louis IX of France (Saint Louis), became heir to the throne on the
- Philippe le Hardi (duke of Burgundy)
Philip II was the duke of Burgundy (1363–1404) and the youngest son of the French king John II the Good. One of the most powerful men of his day in France, he was for a time regent for his nephew Charles VI; and when Charles went insane, he became the virtual ruler of France. John II’s grant of the
- Philippe le Long (king of France)
Philip V was the king of France (from 1316) and king of Navarre (as Philip II, from 1314), who largely succeeded in restoring the royal power to what it had been under his father, Philip IV. Philip was the second son of Philip IV, who made him count of Poitiers in 1311. When his elder brother, King
- Philippe Léopold Louis Marie, King of the Belgians (king of Belgium)
Philippe, King of the Belgians became the king of Belgium in 2013. Philippe was the first of three children of Albert II, who became Belgium’s sixth king in 1993. He received his early education in both Dutch and French, after which he attended the Royal Military Academy and studied abroad at
- Philippe, Charles-Louis (French author)
Charles-Louis Philippe was a writer of novels that describe from personal experience the sufferings of the poor. Philippe was the son of a shoemaker; he was ambitious to become an army officer but was refused entry to the École Polytechnique in 1894 because of his slight physique. He finally found
- Philippe, Count de Paris (French noble)
France: Attempts at a restoration: …and childless; the Orleanist pretender, Philippe d’Orléans, comte de Paris, was young and prolific. The natural solution was to restore Chambord, with the comte de Paris as his successor. Chambord, however, refused to accept the throne except on his own terms, which implied a return to the principle of absolute…
- Philippe, Jacques, II (artist)
Philip James de Loutherbourg was an early Romantic painter, illustrator, printmaker, and scenographer, especially known for his paintings of landscapes and battles and for his innovative scenery designs and special effects for the theatre. First trained under his father, a miniature painter from
- Philippe, King of the Belgians (king of Belgium)
Philippe, King of the Belgians became the king of Belgium in 2013. Philippe was the first of three children of Albert II, who became Belgium’s sixth king in 1993. He received his early education in both Dutch and French, after which he attended the Royal Military Academy and studied abroad at
- Philippeum (memorial, Olympia, Greece)
Olympia: The remains of Olympia: The Philippeum, a circular building of the Ionic order, with Corinthian half columns on the inside, was begun by Philip II (Philip of Macedon) and probably finished by his son, Alexander the Great. Containing gold and ivory statues of Philip, Alexander, and other members of the…
- Philippeville (Algeria)
Skikda, town, Mediterranean Sea port, northeastern Algeria, situated on the Gulf of Stora. Founded by French Marshal Sylvain-Charles Valée in 1838 as the port of Constantine, it has an artificial harbour. Skikda occupies the site of ancient Rusicade, port of 4th-century Cirta, and has the largest
- Philippi (Greece)
Philippi, hill town in the nomós (department) of Kavála, Greece, overlooking the coastal plain and the bay at Neapolis (Kavála). Philip II of Macedon fortified the Thasian settlement called Crenides in 356 bce to control neighbouring gold mines. He derived a fortune from the gold mines but treated
- Philippi (West Virginia, United States)
Philippi, city, seat (1844) of Barbour county, northeastern West Virginia, U.S. It lies in the Tygart Valley River valley, about 13 miles (21 km) south of Grafton. Settled in 1780, it was early called Anglin’s Ford and then Booths Ferry until it was chartered in 1844 and named for Philip Pendleton
- Philippi Races (United States history)
Philippi: …the battle is called the Philippi Races because of the speed with which the Confederate forces under Colonel George A. Porterfield retreated. A marker at the site on Broaddus Hill, now on the campus of Alderson-Broaddus College, describes it as the “First Land Battle between North and South.”