- ulema (Islam)
ʿulamāʾ, the learned of Islam, those who possess the quality of ʿilm, “learning,” in its widest sense. From the ʿulamāʾ, who are versed theoretically and practically in the Muslim sciences, come the religious teachers of the Islamic community—theologians, canon lawyers (muftis), judges (qadis),
- Uléma Musulmans Algériens, Association des (Muslim religious organization)
Association of Algerian Muslim Ulama, a body of Muslim religious scholars (ʿulamāʾ) who, under French rule, advocated the restoration of an Algerian nation rooted in Islamic and Arabic traditions. The association, founded in 1931 and formally organized on May 5, 1935, by Sheikh ʿAbd al-Hamid ben
- Ulex europaeus (plant)
gorse: Common gorse (U. europaeus) is a spiny, yellow-flowered leguminous shrub native to Europe and naturalized in the Middle Atlantic states and on Vancouver Island. The large green spines and green twigs of Spanish gorse (G. hispanica), native to Spain and northern Italy, make it appear…
- ulexite (mineral)
ulexite, borate mineral, NaCaB5O6(ΟH)6·5H2O, that consists of hydrated sodium and calcium borate. Individual crystals are colourless and have a vitreous lustre, whereas the more common nodular, rounded, or lenslike crystal aggregates (often resembling cotton balls) are white and have a silky or
- Ulf Jarl (regent of Denmark)
Canute (I): …when his regent in Denmark, Ulf Jarl, the husband of his sister Estrid, joined the king of Norway and the king of Sweden in a coalition against Denmark. Though Canute was defeated at the Battle of the Holy River, Sweden, terms were made. Scandinavian sources attribute to Canute the death…
- ULF wave (physics)
geomagnetic field: Magnetohydrodynamic waves—magnetic pulsations: …class of electromagnetic waves called ultralow-frequency (ULF) waves, with frequencies from one to 1,000 megahertz. Because the frequencies are so low, the waves are usually characterized by their period of oscillation (one to 1,000 seconds) rather than by frequency.
- ULFA (Indian insurgent group)
Assam People’s Council: …a free hand to the United Liberation Front of Assam (ULFA), a militant separatist group whose violent activities had increased dramatically in the state after the AGP took power. The revelations of direct links between the AGP ministers and the ULFA led New Delhi to dismiss the government in Assam…
- Ulfilas (bishop of the Goths)
Ulfilas was a Christian bishop and missionary who evangelized the Goths, reputedly created the Gothic alphabet, and wrote the earliest translation of the Bible into a Germanic language. Although his life cannot be reconstructed with certainty, fragments have come from 4th- and 5th-century
- Ulfsdotter, Katarina (Swedish saint)
Saint Catherine of Sweden ; feast day March 24) was the daughter of St. Bridget of Sweden, whom she succeeded as superior of the Brigittines. Catherine was married to Egard Lydersson von Kyren, who died shortly after she left for Rome (1350) to join Bridget as her constant companion. She did not
- Ulgen (Asian deity)
shamanism: Worldview: the Mongolian and Turkish peoples, Ülgen, a benevolent deity and the god of the Upper World, has seven sons and nine daughters. Among the Buryat of southern Siberia, Tengri (often identified with Ülgen) also has children—the western ones being good and the eastern ones wicked. The gods of the Buryats…
- Ulhasnagar (India)
Ulhasnagar, city, northwestern Maharashtra state, western India. It lies on the Ulhas River, northeast of Mumbai (Bombay). Part of the Thane industrial area, it specializes in the manufacture of chemicals and silk and nylon textiles. Ulhasnagar became important in 1947 as a refugee camp for
- uli figure (religious carving)
Oceanic art and architecture: New Ireland: …cults were carvings known as uli. These are standing figures with female breasts and male genitals; they sometimes have raised hands and may support smaller figures in front of them or on their shoulders. The head is usually large and is topped by a thin, upright crest; the eyes are…
- uli figure (Papuan sculpture)
uli figure, wooden statue of a type carved in the villages of northern and central New Ireland, Papua New Guinea, that represents an ancestral or mythological personage in the secret uli rites. Only after a series of 13 festivals, held over a three-year period, is the construction of an uli figure
- Ulianovsk (oblast, Russia)
Ulyanovsk, oblast (region), western Russia. The oblast lies athwart the middle Volga River, which is there transformed into a broad lake by the downstream Samara dam. The larger western part lies on the Volga Upland, which is dissected by river valleys and erosion gullies; the smaller Trans-Volga
- Ulianovsk (Russia)
Ulyanovsk, city and administrative centre of Ulyanovsk oblast (region), western Russia. It lies along the Volga River at its confluence with the Sviyaga. Founded in 1648, it was a key fortress on the Sinbirsk defensive line; in 1924 it was renamed after V.I. Ulyanov (Lenin), who was born there and
- Ulibishev, A. D. (Russian art patron)
Mily Balakirev: …Karl Eisrich, music director to A.D. Ulibishev, a wealthy landowner who published well-known books on Mozart and Beethoven. Balakirev had the use of Ulibishev’s music library and at age 15 began to compose and was allowed to rehearse the local theatre orchestra. From 1853 to 1855 he studied mathematics at…
- Ulidae, Princeps (Anglo-Norman conqueror)
John de Courci was an Anglo-Norman conqueror of Ulster, who was a member of a celebrated Norman family of Oxfordshire and Somerset. Sent to Ireland with William FitzAldelm by Henry II in 1176, he immediately led an expedition from Dublin to Ulster and in 1177 seized its capital, Down (now
- üliger (Mongolian literature)
Central Asian arts: Mongolian literature: Üligers, orally transmitted epic stories in verse, form the bulk of native literary expression. Highly stylized, these tales relate adventures of legendary heroes and villains. In spite of their great length (sometimes more than 20,000 lines), they are recited from memory by bards. Like other…
- Ulithi Atoll (atoll, Micronesia)
Ulithi Atoll, coral atoll, Federated States of Micronesia, in the western Pacific Ocean. It comprises roughly 40 islets and has a total land area of 1.75 square miles (4.5 square km). Ulithi was probably sighted by the Portuguese in 1526, but it remained undisturbed by Europeans until 1731, when it
- Ulixbone (national capital, Portugal)
Lisbon, city, port, capital of Portugal, and the centre of the Lisbon metropolitan area. Located in western Portugal on the estuary of the Tagus (Tejo) River, it is the westernmost capital city in continental Europe and serves as the country’s chief port, largest city, and commercial, political,
- Ulixes (Greek mythology)
Odysseus, hero of Homer’s epic poem the Odyssey and one of the most frequently portrayed figures in Western literature. According to Homer, Odysseus was king of Ithaca, son of Laertes and Anticleia (the daughter of Autolycus of Parnassus), and father, by his wife, Penelope, of Telemachus. (In later
- Uljanovsk (Russia)
Ulyanovsk, city and administrative centre of Ulyanovsk oblast (region), western Russia. It lies along the Volga River at its confluence with the Sviyaga. Founded in 1648, it was a key fortress on the Sinbirsk defensive line; in 1924 it was renamed after V.I. Ulyanov (Lenin), who was born there and
- Uljanovsk (oblast, Russia)
Ulyanovsk, oblast (region), western Russia. The oblast lies athwart the middle Volga River, which is there transformed into a broad lake by the downstream Samara dam. The larger western part lies on the Volga Upland, which is dissected by river valleys and erosion gullies; the smaller Trans-Volga
- Ull (Norse mythology)
Ull, in Norse mythology, a god associated with skis and the bow, according to the Icelandic poet and historian Snorri Sturluson in his Prose Edda. Ull is said there to be the handsome son of Sif and the stepson of her husband Thor. Ull possessed warrior-like attributes and was called upon for aid
- Ulladulla (New South Wales, Australia)
Ulladulla, town, southeastern New South Wales, southeastern Australia. It is situated on the Tasman Sea coast along the Princes Highway, 40 miles (65 km) south of Jervis Bay. The town was established in the 1820s as an anchorage for ships importing cedarwood to Sydney (about 110 miles [180 km]
- Ullal (India)
Mangaluru: The suburb of Ullal produces hosiery and coir yarn. Mangaluru maintains a large bazaar near its coastal landing place.
- Ullambana (Buddhism)
Buddhism: Ullambana festival: The importance of the virtues of filial piety and the reverence of ancestors in China and Japan have established Ullambana—often called Hungry Ghost Festival, or Bon (in Japan)— as one of the major Buddhist festivals in those countries. In China worshipers in Buddhist…
- Ullambana Festival (Buddhist festival)
memento mori: Religious and philosophical expressions: …Buddhist Hungry Ghost Festival (Ullambana festival) and its many iterations in numerous Asian countries including Japan (where it is called Bon), Korea, Taiwan, China, Singapore, and Indonesia. Unlike the Christian Lent, these festivals are not somber times of reflection on one’s
- Ullambana Festival (Asian holiday)
Hungry Ghost Festival, frightening and festive Buddhist and Daoist holiday celebrated in East Asia and Southeast Asia, particularly in areas with Chinese cultural influence, to propitiate the ghosts of the deceased. The holiday is celebrated on the 15th day of the 7th month on the Chinese lunar
- Ullathorne, William Bernard (British bishop)
William Bernard Ullathorne was a Roman Catholic missionary to Australia and first bishop of Birmingham, Eng. He was influential in securing the final abolition (1857) of the British system of transporting convicts to Australia. Ullathorne was a descendant of Sir Thomas More. He served as a cabin
- Ulleung Island (island, South Korea)
Ulleung Island, volcanic island, North Gyeongsang do (province), South Korea. Ulleung Island is the main island of Ulleung county, South Korea’s least populated county, and is surrounded by 44 smaller rocky islands, most of which are without permanent habitation and some of which are claimed by
- Ullikummi (Hurrian mythology)
Anatolian religion: Mythology: …epic of the struggle against Ullikummi, and the Theogony, though written in Hittite, are Hurrian in origin and refer to Hurrian and even Mesopotamian deities. The Theogony tells of the struggle for kingship among the gods. Alalu, after holding the kingship for nine years, was defeated by Anu (the Babylonian…
- Ullikummi, Song of (Anatolian mythology)
Anatolian religion: Mythology: The “Song of Ullikummi” tells of a plot by Kumarbi to depose Teshub from his supremacy by begetting a monstrous stone as champion. Ullikummi, the stone monster, grows in the sea, which reaches his waist, while his head touches the sky; he stands on the shoulder…
- Ullman, Edward (American geographer)
central-place theory: Edward Ullman introduced central-place theory to American scholars in 1941. Since then geographers have sought to test its validity. Iowa and Wisconsin have been two areas of empirical research that have come closest to meeting Christaller’s theoretical assumptions.
- Ullman, Trace (British American actress, singer, and writer)
Tracey Ullman is a British-American actress, singer, and writer who is a uniquely gifted mimic and comic, perhaps best known for a series of self-titled sketch-comedy programs in the United States. Ullman was born to a Polish father and British mother. When she was six years old, her father died
- Ullman, Tracey (British American actress, singer, and writer)
Tracey Ullman is a British-American actress, singer, and writer who is a uniquely gifted mimic and comic, perhaps best known for a series of self-titled sketch-comedy programs in the United States. Ullman was born to a Polish father and British mother. When she was six years old, her father died
- Ullmann, Liv (Norwegian actress)
Liv Ullmann is a Norwegian actress known for her natural beauty and intelligent, complex performances. Her fame is closely linked to that of Swedish director Ingmar Bergman, with whom she worked in several films. Ullmann’s father was a Norwegian engineer whose work demanded extensive travel. As a
- Ullmann, Liv Johanne (Norwegian actress)
Liv Ullmann is a Norwegian actress known for her natural beauty and intelligent, complex performances. Her fame is closely linked to that of Swedish director Ingmar Bergman, with whom she worked in several films. Ullmann’s father was a Norwegian engineer whose work demanded extensive travel. As a
- Ulloa, Francisco de (Spanish explorer)
Gulf of California: In 1539 Spanish explorer Francisco de Ulloa proved that Baja California was a peninsula rather than an island, and he named the gulf Mar Bermejo (“Vermilion Sea”) because of the impressive red plankton that is found in its waters. Nevertheless, the myth that the gulf was an island perpetuated…
- Ullor (Indian poet)
South Asian arts: Malayalam: Ullor wrote in the classical tradition, on the basis of which he appealed for universal love, while Vallathol (died 1958) responded to the human significance of social progress.
- Ullr (Norse mythology)
Ull, in Norse mythology, a god associated with skis and the bow, according to the Icelandic poet and historian Snorri Sturluson in his Prose Edda. Ull is said there to be the handsome son of Sif and the stepson of her husband Thor. Ull possessed warrior-like attributes and was called upon for aid
- Ullsten, Ola (prime minister of Sweden)
Sweden: Domestic affairs through the 1990s: Ola Ullsten, leader of the People’s Party (widely known as the Liberal Party and officially the Liberal People’s Party from 1990), succeeded him as prime minister, forming a minority government in which one-third of the ministers were women. Following a general election in 1979, the…
- Ullswater (lake, England, United Kingdom)
Ullswater, lake, in the administrative county of Cumbria, on the border between the historic counties of Cumberland and Westmorland in the Lake District of England. It is the Lake District’s second largest lake, about 7.5 miles (12 km) long and 0.5 mile (0.8 km) wide with an area of about 3 square
- Ulm (Germany)
Ulm, city, Baden-Württemberg Land (state), southwestern Germany. It lies on the left bank of the Danube River at its junction with the Iller and the Blau, opposite the Bavarian town of Neu Ulm. Ulm was first mentioned as a royal domain in 854 and was chartered in the 12th century by the
- Ulm Design School (school, Ulm, Germany)
industrial design: American hegemony and challenges from abroad: …Gestaltung in Ulm, or the Ulm Design School (1953–68), which was often considered a successor to the Bauhaus. One of its founders was the typeface designer Otl Aicher, a corporate-branding specialist, noted author of graphic standards manuals for his clients, and designer whose clients included Lufthansa and Munich’s transportation authority.…
- Ulm School of Design (school, Ulm, Germany)
Max Bill: …was rector (1951–56) of the Ulm School of Design, Germany. He designed the school’s buildings, planned its curriculum, and was director of the department of architecture and product design there. He then served as a professor of environmental design at the State Institute of Fine Arts, Hamburg (1967–74). In 1987…
- Ulm, Battle of (German history)
Battle of Ulm, (Sept. 25–Oct. 20, 1805), major strategic triumph of Napoleon, conducted by his Grand Army of about 210,000 men against an Austrian Army of about 72,000 under the command of Baron Karl Mack von Leiberich. (See “Napoleon’s Major Battles” Interactive Map) Austria had joined the
- Ulmaceae (plant family)
Ulmaceae, the elm family (order Rosales), with 6–7 genera of about 45 species of trees and shrubs, distributed primarily throughout temperate regions. Several members of the family are cultivated as ornamental plants, and some are important for their wood. Members of the family are deciduous or
- Ulman, Douglas Elton (American actor)
Douglas Fairbanks was an American motion picture actor and producer who was one of the first and greatest of the swashbuckling screen heroes. His athletic prowess, gallant romanticism, and natural sincerity made him “King of Hollywood” during the 1920s silent era of film. (Read Lillian Gish’s 1929
- Ulmanis, Kārlis (prime minister of Latvia)
Kārlis Ulmanis was a leader in the fight for Latvian independence in the early decades of the 20th century. He was the first head of the Latvian Republic in 1918 and again in 1936–40 and was premier in 1918, 1919–21, 1925–26, 1931–32, and 1934–40. Ulmanis studied agronomy in Germany as a young man
- Ulmann, Doris (American photographer)
Doris Ulmann was an American photographer known for her portraits of people living in rural parts of the American South. Born into a well-to-do New York family, Ulmann received a progressive education at the Ethical Culture School and took courses in psychology and law at Columbia University. She
- Ulmer, Edgar G. (American director)
Edgar G. Ulmer was an American director known as a supreme stylist of the B-film. His movies, many of which were shot in a week and made on a minuscule budget, notably include The Black Cat (1934) and Detour (1945). Ulmer studied architecture while designing sets in Vienna. Max Reinhardt hired the
- Ulmer, Edgar George (American director)
Edgar G. Ulmer was an American director known as a supreme stylist of the B-film. His movies, many of which were shot in a week and made on a minuscule budget, notably include The Black Cat (1934) and Detour (1945). Ulmer studied architecture while designing sets in Vienna. Max Reinhardt hired the
- Ulmo tree (tree)
Eucryphia: E. cordifolia, which grows to a height of 12 m (40 feet), and E. glutinosa, up to 4.5 m (14.8 feet), have produced the hybrid E. ×nymansensis, hardier than E. cordifolia and tolerant of alkaline soils.
- Ulmus (tree)
elm, (genus Ulmus), genus of about 35 species of forest and ornamental shade trees of the family Ulmaceae, native primarily to north temperate areas. Many are cultivated for their height and attractive foliage. Elm wood is used in constructing boats and farm buildings because it is durable
- Ulmus americana (tree)
elm: Major species: The American elm (Ulmus americana), of eastern North America, may grow 24 to 30 metres (about 80 to 100 feet) tall. It has dark gray, ridged bark and elliptical leaves. Populations in the United States have been decimated by Dutch elm disease.
- Ulmus carpinifolia (tree)
Dutch elm disease: …susceptible in varying degrees, the smooth leaf (Ulmus carpinifolia), Chinese (U. parvifolia), and Siberian (U. pumila) elms have shown good resistance, and experiments with hybrids of American and Asiatic elms have met with much success.
- Ulmus glabra (tree)
elm: Major species: …crown and deeply fissured bark; Wych elm (U. glabra), with smoother bark; and Camperdown elm (U. glabra camperdownii), a variety of Wych elm also known as umbrella elm because of its drooping branches. The fast-growing Siberian elm (U. pumila), a brittle-twigged weak-wooded tree, is sometimes planted for quick shade and…
- Ulmus glabra camperdownii (plant)
elm: Major species: glabra), with smoother bark; and Camperdown elm (U. glabra camperdownii), a variety of Wych elm also known as umbrella elm because of its drooping branches. The fast-growing Siberian elm (U. pumila), a brittle-twigged weak-wooded tree, is sometimes planted for quick shade and for windbreaks.
- Ulmus parvifolia (plant)
elm: Major species: …species planted as ornamentals include Chinese elm (U. parvifolia), a small-leaved species with interesting mottled bark; English elm (U. procera), with a compact crown and deeply fissured bark; Wych elm (U. glabra), with smoother bark; and Camperdown elm (U. glabra camperdownii), a variety of Wych elm also known as umbrella…
- Ulmus procera (tree)
elm: Major species: …species with interesting mottled bark; English elm (U. procera), with a compact crown and deeply fissured bark; Wych elm (U. glabra), with smoother bark; and Camperdown elm (U. glabra camperdownii), a variety of Wych elm also known as umbrella elm because of its drooping branches. The fast-growing Siberian elm (U.…
- Ulmus pumila (tree)
elm: Major species: The fast-growing Siberian elm (U. pumila), a brittle-twigged weak-wooded tree, is sometimes planted for quick shade and for windbreaks.
- Ulmus rubra (plant)
slippery elm, Large-leaved elm (Ulmus rubra or U. fulva) of eastern North America that has hard wood and fragrant inner bark. A gluelike substance in the inner bark has long been steeped in water as a remedy for throat ailments, powdered for use in poultices, and chewed as a thirst quencher, among
- Ulmus thomasii (plant)
elm: Major species: Rock, or cork, elm (U. thomasii) has hard wood and twigs that often develop corky ridges.
- ulna (anatomy)
ulna, inner of two bones of the forearm when viewed with the palm facing forward. (The other, shorter bone of the forearm is the radius.) The upper end of the ulna presents a large C-shaped notch—the semilunar, or trochlear, notch—which articulates with the trochlea of the humerus (upper arm bone)
- ulnar artery (anatomy)
human cardiovascular system: The aorta and its principal branches: …terminal branches, the radial and ulnar arteries, the radial passing downward on the distal (thumb) side of the forearm, the ulnar on the medial side. Interconnections (anastomoses) between the two, with branches at the level of the palm, supply the hand and wrist.
- ulnar collateral ligament (anatomy)
Tommy John surgery: …surgery performed to repair the ulnar collateral ligament (UCL) on the medial side of the elbow by using a graft as a substitute. The surgery is most commonly performed on athletes in throwing sports, especially baseball pitchers. The goals of Tommy John surgery are increasing elbow comfort, stability, and range…
- ulnar collateral ligament reconstruction
Tommy John surgery, surgery performed to repair the ulnar collateral ligament (UCL) on the medial side of the elbow by using a graft as a substitute. The surgery is most commonly performed on athletes in throwing sports, especially baseball pitchers. The goals of Tommy John surgery are increasing
- ulnar nerve (anatomy)
human nervous system: Brachial plexus: The ulnar nerve serves two flexor muscles and a variety of small muscles of the wrist and hand.
- ulnar vein (anatomy)
human cardiovascular system: Superior vena cava and its tributaries: …hand and wrist, and the ulnar veins, both veins following the course of the associated artery. The radial and ulnar veins converge at the elbow to form the brachial vein; this, in turn, unites with the basilic vein at the level of the shoulder to produce the axillary vein. At…
- uloborid spider (arachnid)
spider: Annotated classification: Family Uloboridae About 260 species worldwide. Cribellum; lack poison glands; 3 tarsal claws; eyes in 3 rows; anal tubercle large; make orb webs; Hyptiotes are called triangle spiders. Family Scytodidae (spitting spiders) 160 species mostly in tropical and subtropical regions. 6 eyes arranged in 3
- Uloboridae (arachnid)
spider: Annotated classification: Family Uloboridae About 260 species worldwide. Cribellum; lack poison glands; 3 tarsal claws; eyes in 3 rows; anal tubercle large; make orb webs; Hyptiotes are called triangle spiders. Family Scytodidae (spitting spiders) 160 species mostly in tropical and subtropical regions. 6 eyes arranged in 3
- Ulodidae (insect family)
coleopteran: Annotated classification: Family Ulodidae Found mainly in New Zealand and Australia; example genera Meryx, Brouniphylax, and Syrphetodes. Family Zopheridae Few species, mostly in America. There are many
- Ulothrix (green algae)
Ulothrix, genus of filamentous green algae (family Ulotrichaceae) found in marine and fresh waters. Each cell contains a distinct nucleus, a central vacuole, and a large thin chloroplast with at least one pyrenoid. The specialized cell for attachment is called the holdfast, and the filaments are
- Ulozheniye of 1649 (Russian history)
Boris Ivanovich Morozov: …in the formulation of the ulozheniye (code of laws) of 1649, which granted a number of rights to the gentry and equalized taxation on the townspeople. However, it also formally tied serfs to the estates on which they resided.
- Ulpia Pautalia (Bulgaria)
Kyustendil, town, southwestern Bulgaria. It lies on the margin of a small alluvial basin in the Struma River valley at the foot of the Osogov Mountains. It was known in Roman times as Pautalia, or Ulpia Pautalia. Located on the site of a Thracian fortified settlement, it became an important town
- Ulpian (Roman jurist)
Ulpian was a Roman jurist and imperial official whose writings supplied one-third of the total content of the Byzantine emperor Justinian I’s monumental Digest, or Pandects (completed 533). He was a subordinate to Papinian when that older jurist was praetorian prefect (chief adviser to the emperor
- Ulpius Traianus, Marcus (Roman emperor)
Trajan was a Roman emperor (98–117 ce) who sought to extend the boundaries of the empire to the east (notably in Dacia, Arabia, Armenia, and Mesopotamia), undertook a vast building program, and enlarged social welfare. Marcus Ulpius Traianus was born in the Roman province of Baetica (the area
- Ulric, Saint (German bishop)
Saint Ulrich ; canonized 993; feast day July 4) was a bishop and patron saint of Augsburg, the first person known to have been canonized by a pope. Of noble birth, he studied at the monastic school of Sankt Gallen (St. Gall), Switz., and was then trained by his uncle Bishop Adalbero of Augsburg. He
- Ulrich (Hungarian count)
Ladislas V: …the feud between his guardian Ulrich, count of Cilli, and the Hunyadi family of Hungary.
- Ulrich (duke of Württemberg)
Ulrich was the duke of Württemberg (1498–1519, 1534–50), a prominent figure in the German religious Reformation. A grandson of Ulrich V, count of Württemberg, he succeeded his kinsman Eberhard II as duke of Württemberg in 1498, being declared of age in 1503. He obtained territories from the
- Ulrich von Hutten (German knight)
Ulrich von Hutten was a Franconian knight and humanist, famed as a German patriot, satirist, and supporter of Martin Luther’s cause. His restless, adventurous life, reflecting the turbulent Reformation period, was occupied with public and private quarrels, pursued with both pen and sword. As a
- Ulrich, Lars (American musician)
Metallica: ), drummer Lars Ulrich (b. December 26, 1963, Gentofte, Denmark), lead guitarist Kirk Hammett (b. November 18, 1962, San Francisco, California), and bassist Cliff Burton (b. February 10, 1962, San Francisco—d. September 27, 1986, near Stockholm, Sweden). Jason Newsted (b. March 4, 1963, Battle Creek, Michigan
- Ulrich, Saint (German bishop)
Saint Ulrich ; canonized 993; feast day July 4) was a bishop and patron saint of Augsburg, the first person known to have been canonized by a pope. Of noble birth, he studied at the monastic school of Sankt Gallen (St. Gall), Switz., and was then trained by his uncle Bishop Adalbero of Augsburg. He
- Ulrika Eleonora (queen of Sweden)
Ulrika Eleonora was a Swedish queen whose short reign (1718–20) led to Sweden’s Age of Freedom—a 52-year decline of absolutism in favour of parliamentary government. Ulrika Eleonora was a sister of the unmarried king Charles XII; after the death of her elder sister Hedvig Sofia in 1708, she became
- Ulsan (South Korea)
Ulsan, metropolitan city, southeastern South Korea. Ulsan has the status of a metropolitan city under the direct control of the central government, with administrative status equal to that of a province. At the eastern end of the Taebaek Mountains, facing the East Sea (Sea of Japan), on Ulsan Bay,
- Ulster (county, New York, United States)
Ulster, county, southeastern New York state, U.S., bordered by the Hudson River to the east and the Catskill Mountains to the northwest. The varied terrain is drained by the Wallkill and Neversink (west and east branches) rivers; lakes include Ashokan Reservoir. Much of the county is occupied by
- Ulster (historic province, Ireland)
Ulster, one of the ancient provinces of Ireland and subsequently the northernmost of Ireland’s four traditional provinces (the others being Leinster, Munster, and Connaught [Connacht]). Because of the Ulster cycle of Irish literature, which recounts the exploits of Cú Chulainn and many other Ulster
- Ulster Conservatives and Unionists–New Force (political organization, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom)
Ulster Unionist Party: Policy and structure: …a joint ticket as “Ulster Conservatives and Unionists–New Force” (UCUNF).
- Ulster Covenant (British-Irish history [1912])
Ireland: The 20th-century crisis: Thousands of Ulstermen signed the Solemn League and Covenant to resist Home Rule (1912), and in January 1913 the Ulster unionists established a paramilitary army, the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF), to coordinate armed resistance. In September 1913 Carson announced that a provisional government of Ulster would be established in the…
- Ulster cycle (Irish Gaelic literature)
Ulster cycle, in ancient Irish literature, a group of legends and tales dealing with the heroic age of the Ulaids, a people of northeast Ireland from whom the modern name Ulster derives. The stories, set in the 1st century bc, were recorded from oral tradition between the 8th and 11th century and
- Ulster Defence Association (Irish paramilitary group)
Ulster Defence Association (UDA), loyalist organization founded in Northern Ireland in 1971 to coordinate the efforts of local Protestant vigilante groups in the sectarian conflict in the province. Originally based in the Shankill Road area of Belfast, the UDA was responsible for political murders
- Ulster Defence Regiment (Northern Ireland police)
the Troubles: Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC), and Ulster Defence Regiment (UDR; from 1992 called the Royal Irish Regiment), and their avowed purpose was to play a peacekeeping role, most prominently between the nationalist Irish Republican Army (IRA), which viewed the conflict as a guerrilla war for national independence, and the unionist paramilitary…
- Ulster Democratic Party (political party, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom)
Ulster Defence Association: …changed its name to the Ulster Democratic Party (UDP). Led by Gary McMichael, son of a murdered UDA man, the UDP won enough electoral support to participate in the multiparty peace talks that led to the Good Friday Agreement (April 1998), but it did not secure any seats in subsequent…
- Ulster Democratic Unionist Party (political party, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom)
Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), unionist political party in Northern Ireland. The DUP was cofounded by Ian Paisley, who led it from 1971 to 2008. The party traditionally competes for votes among Northern Ireland’s unionist Protestant community with the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP). Founded in 1971
- Ulster Folk and Transport Museum (museum, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom)
Northern Ireland: Cultural institutions: The Ulster Folk and Transport Museum in Cultra provides a particularly interesting link with the peasant origins of Northern Ireland and includes an open-air folk museum.
- Ulster Freedom Fighters (Irish paramilitary group)
Ulster Defence Association (UDA), loyalist organization founded in Northern Ireland in 1971 to coordinate the efforts of local Protestant vigilante groups in the sectarian conflict in the province. Originally based in the Shankill Road area of Belfast, the UDA was responsible for political murders
- Ulster Loyalist Democratic Party (political party, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom)
Ulster Defence Association: …changed its name to the Ulster Democratic Party (UDP). Led by Gary McMichael, son of a murdered UDA man, the UDP won enough electoral support to participate in the multiparty peace talks that led to the Good Friday Agreement (April 1998), but it did not secure any seats in subsequent…
- Ulster Office (government organization, Ireland)
heraldry: Ireland: …Office became known as the Genealogical Office. A civil servant was then appointed as Chief Herald of Ireland. The office of Ulster King of Arms has now been united with that of Norroy King of Arms in the College of Arms in London. The Irish Herald undertakes the duties formerly…
- Ulster Unionist Party (political party, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom)
Ulster Unionist Party (UUP), oldest and traditionally most successful unionist political party in Northern Ireland, though its influence waned dramatically after the Good Friday Agreement (1998). It was the party of government in the province from 1921 to 1972. The UUP had strong links with the