- Republic of Palau
Palau, country in the western Pacific Ocean. It consists of some 340 coral and volcanic islands perched on the Kyushu-Palau Ridge. The Palau (also spelled Belau or Pelew) archipelago lies in the southwest corner of Micronesia, with Guam 830 miles (1,330 km) to the northeast, New Guinea 400 miles
- Republic of Poland
Poland, country of central Europe. Poland is located at a geographic crossroads that links the forested lands of northwestern Europe and the sea lanes of the Atlantic Ocean to the fertile plains of the Eurasian frontier. Now bounded by seven nations, Poland has waxed and waned over the centuries,
- Republic of San Marino (republic, Europe)
San Marino, small, landlocked republic situated on the slopes of Mount Titano, on the Adriatic side of central Italy between the Emilia-Romagna and Marche regions and surrounded on all sides by the republic of Italy. It is the smallest independent state in Europe after Vatican City and Monaco and,
- Republic of Senegal
Senegal, country in western Africa. Located at the westernmost point of the continent and served by multiple air and maritime travel routes, Senegal is known as the “Gateway to Africa.” The country lies at an ecological boundary where semiarid grassland, oceanfront, and tropical rainforest
- Republic of Seychelles
Seychelles, island republic in the western Indian Ocean, comprising about 115 islands, with lush tropical vegetation, beautiful beaches, and a wide variety of marine life. Situated between latitudes 4° and 11° S and longitudes 46° and 56° E, the major islands of Seychelles are located about 1,000
- Republic of South Africa Constitution Act (South Africa [1961])
South Africa: Constitutional framework: The Republic of South Africa Constitution Act of 1961 transformed the country from a dominion within the British Commonwealth into an independent republic.
- Republic of Suriname
Suriname, country located on the northern coast of South America. Suriname is one of the smallest countries in South America, yet its population is one of the most ethnically diverse in the region. Its economy is dependent on its extensive supply of natural resources, most notably bauxite, of which
- Republic of the Gambia
The Gambia, country in western Africa situated on the Atlantic coast and surrounded by the neighbouring country of Senegal. It occupies a long narrow strip of land that surrounds the Gambia River. The land is flat and is dominated by the river, which is navigable throughout the length of the
- Republic of the Marshall Islands
Marshall Islands, country in the central Pacific Ocean. It consists of some of the easternmost islands of Micronesia. The Marshalls are composed of more than 1,200 islands and islets in two parallel chains of coral atolls—the Ratak, or Sunrise, to the east and the Ralik, or Sunset, to the west. The
- Republic of the Rio Grande Museum (museum, Loredo, Texas, United States)
Laredo: …have flown, is now the Republic of the Rio Grande Museum.
- Republic of the Sudan
Sudan, country located in northeastern Africa. The name Sudan derives from the Arabic expression bilād al-sūdān (“land of the blacks”), by which medieval Arab geographers referred to the settled African countries that began at the southern edge of the Sahara. For more than a century, Sudan—first as
- Republic of Wine, The (novel by Mo Yan)
Mo Yan: …most satisfied with Jiuguo (1992; The Republic of Wine). The novel Fengru feitun (1995; Big Breasts and Wide Hips) caused some controversy, both for its sexual content and for its failure to depict class struggle according to the Chinese Communist Party line. Mo was forced by the PLA to write…
- Republic of Zambia
Zambia, landlocked country in south-central Africa. It is situated on a high plateau and takes its name from the Zambezi River, which drains all but a small northern part of the country. Large parts of Zambia are thinly populated. Much of population is concentrated in the country’s most developed
- Republic of Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe, landlocked country of southern Africa. It shares a 125-mile (200-kilometre) border on the south with the Republic of South Africa and is bounded on the southwest and west by Botswana, on the north by Zambia, and on the northeast and east by Mozambique. The capital is Harare (formerly
- Republic Square (square, Bucharest, Romania)
Bucharest: Republic Square—with the palace hall and the historical Crețulescu Church (1722)—is one of the most beautiful squares of the city. It is linked to Revolution Square (formerly Palace Square), which is surrounded by an imposing group of administrative, political, and cultural buildings including the Romanian…
- Republic Steel Corporation (American corporation)
Cyrus S. Eaton: …and philanthropist, founder of the Republic Steel Corporation (1930).
- Republic Studios (American company)
James Cruze: … (1938)—were programmatic features made for Republic, which was considered a mere picture mill among film studios, illustrating how far his once-lofty stature had slipped.
- Republic, As If, The (novel by al-Aswany)
Alaa al-Aswany: …2018 novel Jumhūriyyah kaʾan (The Republic, As If), whose setting is the 2011 protests, was published in Beirut and banned in Egypt for its criticism of state institutions. A lawsuit was filed against him in March 2019 for a column he wrote for Deutsche Welle that criticized Pres. Abdel…
- Republic, Assembly of the (Portuguese government)
Portugal: Constitutional framework: The parliament comprises the unicameral Assembly of the Republic, which has 230 deputies. Its duties include debating and voting upon legislation, authorizing the government to raise revenues, and approving the laws passed by the legislatures of the autonomous regions. The parliament may also dismiss the government by rejecting a vote…
- Republic, Palace of the (historical building, Berlin, Germany)
Berlin: The city layout: Nearby once stood the Palace of the Republic (Palast der Republik). The building, which opened in 1976 as the new seat of the East German parliament (Volkskammer), occupied the site of the former palace of the Prussian and German kings and kaisers. In 2003 the decision was made to…
- Republic, University of the (university, Montevideo, Uruguay)
Montevideo: The University of the Republic was founded in 1849. The Uruguay Workers’ University (1878) provides vocational training through industrial and night schools.
- República Bolivariana de Venezuela
Venezuela, country located at the northern end of South America. It occupies a roughly triangular area that is larger than the combined areas of France and Germany. Venezuela is bounded by the Caribbean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean to the north, Guyana to the east, Brazil to the south, and Colombia
- República Democrática de São Tomé e Príncipe
Sao Tome and Principe, island country of Central Africa, located on the Equator in the Gulf of Guinea. It consists of two main islands—São Tomé and Príncipe—and several rocky islets, including Rôlas, south of São Tomé island, and Caroço, Pedras, and Tinhosas, south of Príncipe. São Tomé, which is
- república dos sonhos, A (novel by Piñon)
Brazilian literature: Resistance literature during military rule, 1964–85: …A república dos sonhos (1984; The Republic of Dreams). Fernando Gabeira’s O que é isso, companheiro? (1980; “What’s This, Pal?”) and Alfredo Sirkis’s Os carbonários (1980; “The Carbonari”), both testimonies by political exiles, also became best sellers. In 1978 a political opening-up (abertura) paved the way for the redemocratization that…
- república literaria, La (work by Saavedra Fajardo)
Diego de Saavedra Fajardo: Saavedra is also remembered for La república literaria (1655; “The Republic of Letters”), a witty survey of Spanish literature, and for his Corona gótica (1646; “The Gothic Kingdom”), a history of Spain under the Goths.
- República Oriental del Uruguay
Uruguay, country located on the southeastern coast of South America. The second smallest country on the continent, Uruguay has long been overshadowed politically and economically by the adjacent republics of Brazil and Argentina, with both of which it has many cultural and historical similarities.
- República Portuguesa
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
- República, Universidad de la (university, Montevideo, Uruguay)
Montevideo: The University of the Republic was founded in 1849. The Uruguay Workers’ University (1878) provides vocational training through industrial and night schools.
- Républicains Indépendants (political party, France)
France: France after de Gaulle: …of a business party, the Independent Republicans (Républicains Indépendants). Giscard won over Chaban-Delmas in the first round and narrowly defeated Mitterrand in the runoff.
- Republican (Polish political faction)
Poland: Augustus III: …by the Czartoryskis, and the Republicans, with the Potockis and Radziwiłłs at their head.
- Republican (Spanish history)
20th-century international relations: The civil war in Spain: But the Republicans, or loyalists, a Popular Front composed of liberals, Socialists, Trotskyites, Stalinists, and anarchists, took up arms to defend the Republic elsewhere and sought outside aid against what they styled as the latest Fascist threat. Spain became a battleground for the ideologies wrestling for mastery…
- Republican Action (political party, Spain)
Manuel Azaña: …organize a liberal republican party, Republican Action (Acción Republicana), in opposition to the dictatorship of General Miguel Primo de Rivera. He was one of the signatories of the Pact of San Sebastián (August 1930), an alliance of republicans, socialists, and the Catalan left that called for the abdication of King…
- Republican Court, or American Society in the Days of Washington, The (work by Griswold)
Rufus Wilmot Griswold: His best work is The Republican Court, or American Society in the Days of Washington (1855). His books were noted for personality sketches of contemporary writers.
- Republican Era, 1869–1901, The (work by White)
Leonard Dupee White: … (1951), The Jacksonians (1954), and The Republican Era, 1869–1901 (1958). The last of these was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for history in 1959. In addition to his teaching and writing, he served on numerous administrative boards and commissions. He was one of the founders of the Public Administration Review, serving…
- Republican Forces of Ivory Coast (Ivorian rebel group)
Côte d’Ivoire: Fall of Gbagbo: …the rebels—now calling themselves the Republican Forces of Ivory Coast (Forces Républicaines de Côte d’Ivoire; FRCI)—controlled more than two-thirds of the country, including the designated capital of Yamoussoukro. Battle for the de facto capital of Abidjan, where Gbagbo was ensconced, took place over the course of the next couple of…
- Republican Guard (military organization, Iraq)
Iraq War: The 2003 conflict: …central Iraq units of the Republican Guard—a heavily armed paramilitary group connected with the ruling party—were deployed to defend the capital of Baghdad. As U.S. Army and Marine forces advanced northwestward up the Tigris-Euphrates river valley, they bypassed many populated areas where Fedayeen resistance was strongest and were slowed only…
- Republican Independents (political party, France)
France: France after de Gaulle: …of a business party, the Independent Republicans (Républicains Indépendants). Giscard won over Chaban-Delmas in the first round and narrowly defeated Mitterrand in the runoff.
- Republican National Committee (American political organization)
Republican National Committee (RNC), American political organization that oversees the activities of the Republican Party, including organizing the party’s national convention, developing its political platform, coordinating campaign strategies, and fundraising. It is headquartered in Washington,
- Republican National Convention (United States political event)
Republican National Convention, quadrennial meeting of the U.S. Republican Party to select its presidential and vice presidential nominees for the presidential election. Formed in 1854 in opposition to the extension of slavery into the Kansas and Nebraska territories, the Republican Party held its
- Republican National Guard (Portuguese police)
Portugal: Security: …Segurança Pública; PSP) and the Republican National Guard (Guarda Nacional Republicana; GNR) are under the control of the Ministry of Internal Administration. The GNR includes the road police and has jurisdiction over rural areas. The PSP patrols urban areas and directs city traffic. The Fiscal Guard (Guarda Fiscal), which is…
- Republican Party (political party, Puerto Rico)
Puerto Rico: Political developments: federal government; the island’s Republican Party favoured statehood, whereas the Union Party worked for greater autonomy. The Nationalist Party arose in the 1920s and argued for immediate independence. Meanwhile, the pro-U.S. Socialist Party, led by the highly respected labour leader Santiago Iglesias, remained focused on the plight of Puerto…
- Republican Party (political party, Pakistan)
Pakistan: Political decline and bureaucratic ascendancy: …Frontier Province, Mirza formed the Republican Party and made Khan Sahib the chief minister of the new province of West Pakistan. The Republican Party was assembled to represent the landed interests in West Pakistan, the basic source of all political power. Never an organized body, the Republican Party lacked an…
- Republican Party (political party, Spain)
Spain: The Revolution of 1868 and the Republic of 1873: The Republican Party was neither strong nor united. When the Republican leaders, on legal scruples, refused to declare for a federal republic, the provincial federal extremists revolted.
- Republican Party (political party, Germany)
The Republicans (REP), German ultranationalist political party, founded in West Germany in 1983. Although they reject the label, many observers regard the party as neo-fascist. The Republicans’ founders were dissident members of the Christian Social Union who had protested that party’s role in
- Republican Party (political party, France)
Republican Party, French political party formed in May 1977 when the former National Foundation of Independent Republicans (Fédération Nationale des Républicains Indépendents)—founded in 1966 by Valéry Giscard d’Estaing—was merged with other small groups. It is conservative in domestic social and
- Republican Party (political party, Bolivia)
Bolivia: The Republican Party: The abrasive quality of the strong-willed Montes and the disintegration of the ruling Liberal Party finally permitted the Republicans to stage a successful coup d’état in 1920 and become the ruling party. Upon achieving political power, however, the new party immediately split into…
- Republican Party (political party, Ireland)
Fianna Fáil, the dominant political party in the Republic of Ireland since the 1930s. Constituted in May 1926, Fianna Fáil comprised opponents of the Anglo-Irish Treaty (1921) that had brought the Irish Free State into existence. The party was established and led by Eamon de Valera, who had been
- Republican Party (political party, United States [1854-present])
Republican Party, in the United States, one of the two major political parties, the other being the Democratic Party. During the 19th century the Republican Party stood against the extension of slavery to the country’s new territories and, ultimately, for slavery’s complete abolition. During the
- Republican Party (political party, United States [1792–1798])
Republican Party, in U.S. history, political party formed from the nucleus of the Anti-Federalists and the country’s first opposition party. Formed in 1792 by supporters of Thomas Jefferson in opposition to the Federalist Party of Alexander Hamilton, the party developed into the
- Republican Peasants’ Nation Party (political party, Turkey)
Turkey: Political repressions: …Peasants’ Party to form the Republican Peasants’ Nation Party. Laws passed in 1954 provided for heavy fines on journalists thought to have damaged the prestige of the state or the law; several prominent journalists were prosecuted under this law, which was made more severe in 1956, while other laws substantially…
- Republican People’s Party (political party, Turkey)
Turkey: Government: …own party, which became the Republican People’s Party (Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi; CHP), dominated all assemblies until 1950; in this period the assemblies included a heavy preponderance of urban professional men and of officials with a university education. With an outlook different from that of the illiterate Turkish peasants, they carried…
- Republican Proposal (political party, Argentina)
Mauricio Macri: …foundation for the successor party, Republican Proposal (PRO). Under his leadership, over the next dozen years, PRO was transformed into Argentina’s first new nationally viable and competitive political party in more than 60 years.
- Republican River (river, United States)
Republican River, river formed by the confluence of the North Fork of the Republican River and the Arikaree River near Haigler, Neb., U.S. It flows eastward through Swanson Lake (behind Trenton Dam) past the towns of McCook, Red Cloud, and Superior and then turns southeastward through Kansas to
- Republican Turkish Party (political party, Cyprus)
Cyprus: Political process: … (Toplumcu Kurtuluș Partisi), and the Republican Turkish Party (Cumhuriyetc̦i Türk Partisi).
- Republican, The (British publication)
Richard Carlile: …and, changing its name to The Republican, he edited 12 volumes in prison. Curiously, the government made no attempt to stop his editorial work in jail, though his wife, sister, and other persons who operated his printing shop were harassed by police and at times imprisoned.
- republicanism (government)
presidency of the United States of America: The presidency in the 19th century: By completing the transition to republicanism, he humanized the presidency and made it a symbol not of the nation but of the people. He talked persuasively about the virtue of limiting government—his first inaugural address was a masterpiece on the subject—and he made gestures in that direction. He slashed the…
- Republicans, The (political party, Germany)
The Republicans (REP), German ultranationalist political party, founded in West Germany in 1983. Although they reject the label, many observers regard the party as neo-fascist. The Republicans’ founders were dissident members of the Christian Social Union who had protested that party’s role in
- Republiek Suriname
Suriname, country located on the northern coast of South America. Suriname is one of the smallest countries in South America, yet its population is one of the most ethnically diverse in the region. Its economy is dependent on its extensive supply of natural resources, most notably bauxite, of which
- Republik Indonesia
Indonesia, country located off the coast of mainland Southeast Asia in the Indian and Pacific oceans. The most populous country in Southeast Asia and the fourth most populous in the world, Indonesia is situated on an archipelago that lies across the Equator and spans a distance equivalent to
- Republik Österreich
Austria, largely mountainous landlocked country of south-central Europe. Together with Switzerland, it forms what has been characterized as the neutral core of Europe, notwithstanding Austria’s full membership since 1995 in the supranational European Union (EU). A great part of Austria’s prominence
- Republik, Palast der (historical building, Berlin, Germany)
Berlin: The city layout: Nearby once stood the Palace of the Republic (Palast der Republik). The building, which opened in 1976 as the new seat of the East German parliament (Volkskammer), occupied the site of the former palace of the Prussian and German kings and kaisers. In 2003 the decision was made to…
- Republika e Shqipërisë
Albania, country in southern Europe, located in the western part of the Balkan Peninsula on the Strait of Otranto, the southern entrance to the Adriatic Sea. The capital city is Tirana (Tiranë). Albanians refer to themselves as shqiptarë—often taken to mean “sons of eagles,” though it may well
- Republika Hrvatska
Croatia, country located in the northwestern part of the Balkan Peninsula. It is a small yet highly geographically diverse crescent-shaped country. Its capital is Zagreb, located in the north. The present-day republic is composed of the historically Croatian regions of Croatia-Slavonia (located in
- Republika Makedonija
North Macedonia, landlocked country of the south-central Balkans. It is bordered to the north by Kosovo and Serbia, to the east by Bulgaria, to the south by Greece, and to the west by Albania. The capital is Skopje. The Republic of North Macedonia is located in the northern part of the area
- Republika Srpska (political organization, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Bosnia and Herzegovina: Postwar Bosnia and Herzegovina: … and the Republika Srpska (Bosnian Serb Republic), were largely autonomous, each having its own assembly.
- Republikaner, Die (political party, Germany)
The Republicans (REP), German ultranationalist political party, founded in West Germany in 1983. Although they reject the label, many observers regard the party as neo-fascist. The Republicans’ founders were dissident members of the Christian Social Union who had protested that party’s role in
- Republikanischer Schutzbund (Austrian political organization)
Schutzbund, (German: Republican Defense League), paramilitary socialist organization active in Austria between World War I and 1934. Compared with its chief right-wing opponent force, the Heimwehr, the Schutzbund was tightly organized, having been created in 1923 from the workers’ guards by the
- République Batave (historical republic, Netherlands)
Batavian Republic, republic of the Netherlands, established after it was conquered by the French during the campaign of 1794–95. Formalized in a constitution of 1798, it possessed a centralized government patterned after that of the Directory in France and was bound to France by alliance. In March
- République Centrafricaine
Central African Republic, landlocked country located in the centre of Africa. The area that is now the Central African Republic has been settled for at least 8,000 years. The earliest inhabitants were the probable ancestors of today’s Aka (Pygmy) peoples, who live in the western and southern
- République Cisalpine (historical territory, Italy)
Cisalpine Republic, republic formed by General Napoleon Bonaparte in June 1797 in conquered territories centred in the Po River valley of northern Italy. Its territory first embraced Lombardy, then extended to Emilia, Modena, and Bologna (collectively known for some months previously as the
- République Cispadane (historical territory, Italy)
Cispadane Republic, state formed in December 1796 by General Napoleon Bonaparte out of the merger of the duchies of Reggio and Modena and the legate states of Bologna and Ferrara. By the Treaty of Tolentino (Feb. 19, 1797), the pope also ceded Romagna to the republic. Deputies from the constituent
- République de Bismarck, ou Origines allemandes de la Troisième République, La (work by Bainville)
Jacques Bainville: … he published his first book, La République de Bismarck, ou Origines allemandes de la Troisième République (1905; “The Republic of Bismarck: German Origins of the Third Republic”), in which he emphasized the German chancellor Otto von Bismarck’s support of French Republicanism.
- République du Mali
Mali, landlocked country of western Africa, mostly in the Saharan and Sahelian regions. Mali is largely flat and arid. The Niger River flows through its interior, functioning as the main trading and transport artery in the country. Sections of the river flood periodically, providing much-needed
- République du Sénégal
Senegal, country in western Africa. Located at the westernmost point of the continent and served by multiple air and maritime travel routes, Senegal is known as the “Gateway to Africa.” The country lies at an ecological boundary where semiarid grassland, oceanfront, and tropical rainforest
- République Fédérale Islamique des Comores
Comoros, an independent state comprising three of the main Comoro Islands in the Indian Ocean, off the coast of East Africa. The fourth main island of the Comorian archipelago, Mayotte, is claimed by the country of Comoros but administered by France. The volcanic islands of the Comorian archipelago
- République Française
France, country of northwestern Europe. Historically and culturally among the most important nations in the Western world, France has also played a highly significant role in international affairs, with former colonies in every corner of the globe. Bounded by the Atlantic Ocean and the
- République Gabonaise
Gabon, country lying on the west coast of Africa, astride the Equator. A former French colony, Gabon retains strong ties to France and to the French language and culture. The capital is Libreville. Gabon is bordered by Equatorial Guinea and Cameroon to the north, the Republic of the Congo to the
- République Islamique de Mauritanie
Mauritania, country on the Atlantic coast of Africa. Mauritania forms a geographic and cultural bridge between the North African Maghrib (a region that also includes Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia) and the westernmost portion of sub-Saharan Africa. Culturally, it forms a transitional zone between
- République Ligurienne (historical republic, Europe)
Ligurian Republic, republic created by Napoleon Bonaparte on June 15, 1797, organizing the conquered city of Genoa and its environs. The government was modeled on that of the Directory in France, and the republic was tied to France by alliance. In 1803 it became also a military district, closely
- République Parthénopéenne (historical republic, Italy)
Parthenopean Republic, short-lived republic in Naples proclaimed on Jan. 23, 1799, after a popular uprising of pro-French republicans resulted in the ouster of King Ferdinand IV. A counterrevolution the same year, aided by a papal army and an English fleet under Horatio Nelson and marked by
- République Romaine (historical territory, Italy [1798–1799])
Roman Republic, republic established in February 1798 by French troops occupying Rome and its environs. The pope was forced into exile, and the new republic was set up under an executive of seven consuls. In November 1798 Ferdinand IV of Naples sent an army that recaptured Rome, but the French
- repudiation (law)
family law: Divorce: …both parties were alive was repudiation, resulting usually in the return of the woman to the power of her family. Repudiation has had a considerable history; it has strongly influenced marriage law in Muslim, Jewish, Chinese, and Japanese law. In Islamic law, repudiation can occur without proof of legally designated…
- Répudiation, La (work by Boudjedra)
Rachid Boudjedra: …Algerian writer whose first novel, La Répudiation (1969; The Repudiation), gained notoriety because of its explicit language and frontal assault on Muslim traditionalism in contemporary Algeria. Because of that work, Boudjedra was hailed as the leader of a new movement of experimental fiction.
- Repulse (British ship)
World War II: Pearl Harbor and the Japanese expansion, to July 1942: …Wales and the battle cruiser Repulse, sailing from Singapore to cut Japanese communications, were sunk by Japanese aircraft on December 10. By the end of January 1942, two Japanese divisions, with air and armoured support, had occupied all Malaya except Singapore Island. In Burma, meanwhile, other Japanese troops had taken…
- Repulse Bay (inlet, Queensland, Australia)
Repulse Bay, inlet of the Coral Sea, on the central Queensland coast, northeastern Australia. Oriented northwest-southeast, the bay is about 16 miles (26 km) wide and about 19 miles (31 km) long. The area was visited by the British explorer Capt. James Cook in June 1770. He had hoped to lay up his
- Repulsion (film by Polanski [1965])
Repulsion, British psychological thriller film, released in 1965, directed by Roman Polanski and noted for the stellar lead performance of Catherine Deneuve. Carol Ledoux (played by Deneuve) is a beautiful but fragile and mentally disturbed young woman from Belgium who lives with her sister Helen
- repulsive potential
chemical bonding: Repulsive force: The repulsive part of the intermolecular potential is essentially a manifestation of the overlap of the wave functions of the two species in conjunction with the Pauli exclusion principle. It reflects the impossibility for electrons with the same spin to occupy the same…
- Reputation (album by Swift)
Taylor Swift: Reputation, Lover, Folklore, Evermore, and controversies: …Me Do,” and her album Reputation became the top-selling American LP of 2017.
- requeening (beekeeping)
beekeeping: Requeening a colony: When a beekeeper requeens a colony, he removes the failing or otherwise undesirable queen and places a new one in a screen cage in the broodnest. After a few days the colony becomes adjusted to her and she can be released from…
- Requena (Spain)
Requena, city, Valencia provincia (province) and comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), eastern Spain. Overlooking the left bank of the Magro River, the city, 2,270 feet (692 metres) above sea level, commands the Utiel plain. Settlement of Requena’s site dates from antiquity; there are remains
- Requesens y Zúñiga, Luis de (Spanish governor of The Netherlands)
Luis de Requesens y Zúñiga was the Spanish governor of the Netherlands during one phase (1573–76) of the Dutch revolt called the Eighty Years’ War. Succeeding the tyrannical Fernando Álvarez, duque de Alba, he tried unsuccessfully to compromise with the rebellious provinces. Requesens’s early
- Requessens y Zúñiga, Luis de (Spanish governor of The Netherlands)
Luis de Requesens y Zúñiga was the Spanish governor of the Netherlands during one phase (1573–76) of the Dutch revolt called the Eighty Years’ War. Succeeding the tyrannical Fernando Álvarez, duque de Alba, he tried unsuccessfully to compromise with the rebellious provinces. Requesens’s early
- Requests, Court of (English law)
Court of Requests, in England, one of the prerogative courts that grew out of the king’s council (Curia Regis) in the late 15th century. The court’s primary function was to deal with civil petitions from poor people and the king’s servants. Called the Court of Poor Men’s Causes until 1529, it was a
- requests, master of (French history)
France: The growth of a professional bureaucracy: There were also masters of requests (maîtres de requêtes), lawyers whose expertise was invaluable when the council sat in a judicial capacity. But in the council the professional element that assumed the greatest significance in the course of the 16th and 17th centuries was the holders of the…
- Requêtes, Chambre des (French court)
Chambre des Requêtes, (French: Chamber of Petitions), in France under the ancien régime, a chamber of the Parlement of Paris with responsibilities for examining the petitions of parties desiring to bring a case before the Parlement and for acting as a court of first instance for those with
- requêtes, maitre de (French history)
France: The growth of a professional bureaucracy: There were also masters of requests (maîtres de requêtes), lawyers whose expertise was invaluable when the council sat in a judicial capacity. But in the council the professional element that assumed the greatest significance in the course of the 16th and 17th centuries was the holders of the…
- Requiem (mass by Verdi)
Requiem, requiem mass by Giuseppe Verdi, intended as a memorial to a departed hero—the poet, playwright, and novelist Alessandro Manzoni. Requiem premiered in Milan on May 22, 1874. It is Verdi’s largest-scale nonoperatic work. The leading Italian writer of the 1800s, Manzoni played the role in
- requiem (music)
requiem mass, musical setting of the Mass for the Dead (missa pro defunctis), named for the beginning of the Latin of the Introit “Requiem aeternam dona eis Domine” (“Give them eternal rest, O Lord”). The polyphonic composition for the requiem mass differs from the normal mass in that it not only
- Requiem (work by Berlioz)
Hector Berlioz: Mature career of Hector Berlioz: …where he composed his great Requiem, the Grande Messe des morts (1837), the symphonies Harold en Italie (1834) and Roméo et Juliette (1839), and the opera Benvenuto Cellini (Paris, 1838).
- Requiem (mass by Haydn)
Michael Haydn: …and vocal soloists, and his Requiem of 1771 influenced Mozart’s own famous Requiem of 1791. Haydn also wrote numerous symphonies, divertimenti, and other secular compositions. He was an intimate friend of Mozart (who wrote his violin-viola duos to fulfill a commission Haydn was too ill to complete) and was a…