- Visions of the End of the World (work by Leonardo da Vinci)
Leonardo da Vinci: Later painting and drawing: …his series of pictorial sketches Visions of the End of the World (c. 1517–18). There Leonardo’s power of imagination—born of reason and fantasy—attained its highest level. Leonardo suggested that the immaterial forces in the cosmos, invisible in themselves, appear in the material things they set in motion. What he had…
- Visions, Les (work by Lamartine)
Alphonse de Lamartine: Political career: …wanted to write a poem, Les Visions, that he had been thinking about since 1821 and that he had conceived of as an “epic of the soul.” The symbolic theme was that of a fallen angel cast out of heaven for having chosen the love of a woman and condemned…
- visit and search (military procedure)
visit and search, procedure adopted by a belligerent warship to ascertain whether a merchant vessel is liable to seizure. If an inspection of the papers shows the ship to be an enemy vessel or to be carrying contraband, breaking blockade, or engaging in unneutral service, it is immediately
- Visit from St. Nicholas, A (narrative poem)
A Visit from St. Nicholas, narrative poem first published anonymously in the Troy (New York) Sentinel on December 23, 1823. It became an enduring part of Christmas tradition, and, because of its wide popularity, both Nicholas, the patron saint of Christmas, and the legendary figure Santa Claus were
- Visit from the Goon Squad, A (novel by Egan)
Jennifer Egan: Egan’s next novel was A Visit from the Goon Squad, which follows the life of a record producer as well as a number of other characters, covers several decades, is told from different points of view, and does not follow a linear or chronological order. The novel ultimately reveals…
- Visit of the Queen of Sheba (painting by Fontana)
Lavinia Fontana: Her Visit of the Queen of Sheba to Solomon is her most ambitious surviving narrative work. She was elected a member of the Roman Academy, a rare honour for a woman.
- Visit to a Small Planet (film by Taurog [1960])
Norman Taurog: Martin and Lewis films of Norman Taurog: They fared less well with Visit to a Small Planet (1960), about an alien visitor (Lewis). It was based on a Gore Vidal play, but the film replaced much of the original satire with Lewis’s slapstick antics, and the resulting production was uneven.
- Visit to the Exposition of 1889, A (work by Rousseau)
Henri Rousseau: Civil service career and early paintings: …wrote a vaudeville play entitled A Visit to the Exposition of 1889, which he did not succeed in having produced. In this play, as in other theatrical works he wrote, his naiveté revealed itself even more than in the technical aspects of his painting. Also revealed, however, was his intense…
- Visit, The (musical by Kander and Ebb)
Chita Rivera: …productions of Kander and Ebb’s The Visit (2001, 2008, 2014) and a Broadway revival of The Mystery of Edwin Drood (2012). In 2015 Rivera reprised her role as the vengeful Claire Zachanassian in The Visit on Broadway, earning another Tony nomination.
- Visit, The (play by Dürrenmatt)
The Visit, drama in three acts by Swiss playwright Friedrich Dürrenmatt, performed and published in German in 1956 as Der Besuch der alten Dame. The play’s protagonist Claire, a multimillionaire, visits her hometown after an absence of many years and offers the residents great wealth if they will
- Visit, The (film by Shyamalan [2015])
M. Night Shyamalan: …and compelling character development in The Visit (2015) and Split (2016), the latter being a sequel to Unbreakable.
- visita (Spanish government)
visitador: The institution of the visita (“inspection”) was applied also to the Spanish colonies in the Americas. The visitador reported to the Council of the Indies (colonial office) in Madrid. Visitas were to be initiated without warning; they might concern only one official or province or an entire principal colonial…
- visitador (Spanish government official)
visitador, royally appointed official sent periodically in the late Middle Ages to investigate the administration of justice in the towns of the Spanish Kingdom of Castile. In the late 15th century, the visitadores were also enjoined to inspect the other aspects of civic administration, including
- Visitandine (Roman Catholic order)
Visitandine, a Roman Catholic order of nuns founded by St. Francis de Sales and St. Jane Frances de Chantal at Annecy, Fr., in 1610. The order was originally destined for charitable work, visiting and caring for the sick and poor in their homes, as well as for prayer. But, after five years of this
- Visitante (Puerto Rican musician)
Calle 13: …of language, while his stepbrother, Eduardo José Cabra Martínez (“Visitante”; b. September 10, 1978, San Juan, Puerto Rico), masterminded the music. The duo was one of the most popular and influential groups on the Latin popular music scene in the early 21st century.
- Visitants (work by Eggers)
Dave Eggers: Visitants (2013) is a collection of travel writing.
- Visitation (Christianity)
Visitation, the visit, described in the Gospel According to Luke (1:39–56), made by the Virgin Mary, pregnant with Jesus, to her cousin Elizabeth, who was pregnant with St. John the Baptist. At the sound of Mary’s greeting, the Elizabeth felt her baby leap in her womb. According to later Catholic
- Visitation of Holy Mary, Congregation of the (Roman Catholic order)
Visitandine, a Roman Catholic order of nuns founded by St. Francis de Sales and St. Jane Frances de Chantal at Annecy, Fr., in 1610. The order was originally destined for charitable work, visiting and caring for the sick and poor in their homes, as well as for prayer. But, after five years of this
- Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Feast of the (Roman Catholicism)
Visitation: The Feast of the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary is celebrated in the Roman Catholic Church on May 31 (it was celebrated on July 2 until 1969).
- Visitation Order (Roman Catholic order)
Visitandine, a Roman Catholic order of nuns founded by St. Francis de Sales and St. Jane Frances de Chantal at Annecy, Fr., in 1610. The order was originally destined for charitable work, visiting and caring for the sick and poor in their homes, as well as for prayer. But, after five years of this
- Visitation, Articles of (English history)
petit jury: …a distinct form when the Articles of Visitation in England (1194) separated accusatory and trial juries—the grand and petit juries of today.
- Visiteurs du soir, Les (film by Carné)
Marcel Carné: Les Visiteurs du soir (1942; The Devil’s Envoys), a costume drama that combines spectacle with romantic passion, is photographed with the lyricism and flowing smoothness characteristic of all Carné’s films. Les Enfants du paradis (1945; Children of Paradise), a fictionalized portrait of the mime Jean-Gaspard Deburau, paints a rich and…
- Visiting Edna (play by Rabe)
David Rabe: …Fire (first performed 2012); and Visiting Edna (2016).
- Visiting Mrs. Nabokov, and Other Excursions (essays by Amis)
Martin Amis: …Other Visits to America (1986), Visiting Mrs. Nabokov, and Other Excursions (1993), The War Against Cliché (2001), and The Rub of Time: Bellow, Nabokov, Hitchens, Travolta, Trump. Essays and Reportage, 1994-2016 (2017). Experience (2000), an autobiography that often focuses on his father, was acclaimed for an emotional depth and profundity…
- Visitors, The (film by Kazan [1972])
Elia Kazan: Films, stage work, and writing of the 1960s and ’70s of Elia Kazan: The Visitors (1972), one of Kazan’s lesser efforts, featured James Woods as a veteran whose service in the Vietnam War comes back to haunt him. Kazan’s final film, The Last Tycoon (1976), was an adaptation of an unfinished novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald, with a…
- Visits of Elizabeth, The (work by Glyn)
Elinor Glyn: Her first book, The Visits of Elizabeth, was an epistolary novel, consisting of a group of letters from a young girl to her mother, that described the foibles and philanderings of a group of European aristocrats. First serialized in the World, it was published in book form in…
- Viskingar och rop (film by Bergman [1972])
Roger Corman: New World Pictures: …foreign films, including Ingmar Bergman’s Cries and Whispers (1972), Federico Fellini’s Amarcord (1973), and Volker Schlöndorff’s The Tin Drum (1979). Corman sold New World Pictures in 1983 and founded Concorde-New Horizons, a company devoted strictly to movie production.
- Viskningar och rop (film by Bergman [1972])
Roger Corman: New World Pictures: …foreign films, including Ingmar Bergman’s Cries and Whispers (1972), Federico Fellini’s Amarcord (1973), and Volker Schlöndorff’s The Tin Drum (1979). Corman sold New World Pictures in 1983 and founded Concorde-New Horizons, a company devoted strictly to movie production.
- Vislinsky Zaliv (lagoon, Baltic Sea)
Vistula Lagoon, shallow, marsh-fringed lagoon on the Baltic coast, bisected by the Polish-Russian border and considered part of the Gulf of Gdańsk. Covering 330 square miles (855 square km), it is 56 miles (90 km) long, 6 to 15 miles (10 to 19 km) wide, and up to 17 feet (5 meters) deep. The Nogat,
- Vísnabók (verse book by Thorláksson)
Gudbrandur Thorláksson: …a second attempt with the Vísnabók (verse book, 1612), an anthology including Catholic poems such as Lilja—purged of elements incompatible with Lutheran orthodoxy—and new Reformation verses. He introduced the Lutheran catechism in the schools and the first Lutheran prayer and service books. He also determined the geographic position of Iceland…
- Visnjic, Goran (American actor)
ER: …2009), Maura Tierney (1999–2009), and Goran Visnjic (1999–2008).
- Viṣṇuism (Hindu sect)
Vaishnavism, one of the major forms of modern Hinduism, characterized by devotion to the god Vishnu and his incarnations (avatars). A devotee of Vishnu is called a Vaishnava. The devotional Vaishnava literature that emerged in Sanskrit and in vernacular writings from the 10th through the 16th
- Viṣṇusvāmin (Hinduism)
Vishnusvamin, in Hinduism, a Vaishnavite sampradaya (spiritual tradition tracing its lineage to a mythic or divine figure) founded probably in the early 15th century by Vishnusvamin, a South Indian religious figure who taught chiefly in Gujarat state. His system, also called Rudra-sampradaya
- Visnuvardhana (Hoysala ruler)
India: The Hoysalas and Pandyas: Vishnuvardhana consolidated the kingdom in the 12th century. The Hoysalas were involved in conflict with the Yadava kingdom, which was seeking to expand southward, particularly during the reign of Ballala II (reigned 1173–1220). Hostilities also developed with the Colas to the east. The armies of…
- Visnuvardhana (Eastern Cālukya ruler)
India: The Deccan: …Pishtapuram with his younger brother Vishnuvardhana as the first king. Pulakeshin then launched another major campaign against the powerful southern Indian kingdom of the Pallavas, in which he defeated their king Mahendravarman I—thus inaugurating a conflict between the two kingdoms that was to continue for many centuries. Pulakeshin II sent…
- visored shrimp (crustacean)
crustacean: Annotated classification: Leptostraca Permian to present; bivalved carapace encloses 8 pairs of leaflike limbs; movable rostrum; telson with caudal rami; marine; about 10 species. Subclass Hoplocarida Carboniferous to present. Order Stomatopoda (mantis shrimps)
- Visp-rat (Zoroastrianism)
Avesta: The Visp-rat is a lesser liturgical scripture, containing homages to a number of Zoroastrian spiritual leaders. The Vendidad, or Vidēvdāt, is the main source for Zoroastrian law, both ritual and civil. It also gives an account of creation and the first man, Yima. The Yashts are…
- Visrivier (river, Namibia)
Fish River, stream in southern Namibia. It rises in Namaqualand and flows south across the Great Namaqualand plateau, where it cuts a spectacular gorge 1,000 to 2,300 feet (300 to 700 m) deep, to empty into the Orange River. It is about 375 miles (600 km) long and is
- Visscher, Anna (Dutch poet)
Anna Visscher was a Dutch poet and daughter of the Renaissance man of letters Roemer Visscher. She was admired and praised in verse by such poets as Constantijn Huygens and Pieter Corneliszoon Hooft. Anna Visscher’s poetry is rather stiff and impersonal; she wrote for the most part sonnets and
- Visscher, Frans (Dutch explorer)
Anthony van Diemen: …expeditions of Abel Tasman and Frans Visscher in 1642 and 1644 on which they discovered Tasmania (originally Van Diemen’s Land), New Zealand, Tonga, Fiji, and the northern coast of Australia.
- Visscher, Roemer (Dutch poet)
Roemer Visscher was a poet and moralist of the early Dutch Renaissance who was at the centre of the cultural circle that included the young poets Pieter C. Hooft, Joost van den Vondel, and Gerbrand Bredero. A friend of Henric L. Spieghel and Dirck Coornhert, he was foremost in the movement for the
- Visscher, Roemer Pieterszoon (Dutch poet)
Roemer Visscher was a poet and moralist of the early Dutch Renaissance who was at the centre of the cultural circle that included the young poets Pieter C. Hooft, Joost van den Vondel, and Gerbrand Bredero. A friend of Henric L. Spieghel and Dirck Coornhert, he was foremost in the movement for the
- Visser ’t Hooft, Willem Adolph (Dutch theologian)
Willem Adolph Visser ’t Hooft was a Dutch clergyman and theologian who led the World Council of Churches as its secretary-general from 1948 to 1966. Visser ’t Hooft was educated at the Haarlem Gymnasium and prepared for the ministry of the Netherlands Reformed Church at the University of Leiden.
- VISTA (American organization)
Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA), American governmental organization (created 1964) that placed volunteers throughout the United States to help fight poverty through work on community projects with various organizations, communities, and individuals. Among the related issues addressed by
- VistaVision (film process)
History of film: The threat of television: …adopted a nonanamorphic process called VistaVision that exposed double-frame images by running film through special cameras and projectors horizontally rather than vertically), and many studios were experimenting with wide-gauge film systems (e.g., Todd-AO, 1955; Panavision-70, 1960) that required special equipment but eliminated the distortion inherent in the anamorphic process.
- Vistazo (Ecuadorian magazine)
Ecuador: Media and publishing: Vistazo (“Glance”), in Guayaquil, is the most popular magazine, covering national news events and personalities in a lively and often irreverent fashion. Radio stations include one of the oldest and most powerful transmitters in the Andes, La Voz de los Andes (“The Voice of the…
- Vistrítsa River (river, Greece)
Aliákmon River, river, the longest in Greek Macedonia (Modern Greek: Makedonía). The river’s total length is 185 miles (297 km). Rising in the Grámmos Mountains of the eastern Pindus (Píndos) Range on the Albanian frontier, the Aliákmon River flows southeast through gentle valleys and basins and is
- Vistula (Ohio, United States)
Toledo, city, seat (1835) of Lucas county, northwestern Ohio, U.S., at the mouth of the Maumee River (bridged). It lies along Maumee Bay (southwestern tip of Lake Erie), about 55 miles (89 km) southwest of Detroit, Mich., and is a principal Great Lakes port, being the hub of a metropolitan complex
- Vistula Glacial Stage (paleontology)
Weichsel Glacial Stage, major division of late Pleistocene deposits and time in western Europe (the Pleistocene Epoch began about 2.6 million years ago and ended about 11,700 years ago). The Weichsel Glacial Stage followed the Eemian Interglacial Stage and marks the last major incursion of
- Vistula Lagoon (lagoon, Baltic Sea)
Vistula Lagoon, shallow, marsh-fringed lagoon on the Baltic coast, bisected by the Polish-Russian border and considered part of the Gulf of Gdańsk. Covering 330 square miles (855 square km), it is 56 miles (90 km) long, 6 to 15 miles (10 to 19 km) wide, and up to 17 feet (5 meters) deep. The Nogat,
- Vistula Land (region, Eastern Europe)
Poland: The January 1863 uprising and its aftermath: …in the kingdom—now called the Vistula Land—were designed to reduce it to a mere province of Russia, denied even the benefits of subsequent reforms in Russia proper. Large garrisons and emergency legislation kept the Poles down. Many individuals involved in the rising were executed or deported to Siberia; thousands of…
- Vistula River (river, Poland)
Vistula River, largest river of Poland and of the drainage basin of the Baltic Sea. With a length of 651 miles (1,047 kilometres) and a drainage basin of some 75,100 square miles (194,500 square kilometres), it is a waterway of great importance to the nations of eastern Europe; more than 85 percent
- Vistula, Operation (Polish history)
Dolnośląskie: Geography: …displaced within the framework of Operation Vistula, a massive relocation program in 1947. Population density in Dolnośląskie is high, though the province has experienced some depopulation, particularly in the Sudeten region, which has accompanied the recent decline of heavy industry. Nearly three-fourths of the population is urban, centred on Wrocław,…
- Vistulan (Slavic tribe)
Kraków: History: …of the Wiślanie tribe (Vistulans), who occupied Małopolska (Little Poland) until the 10th century. From 988 to 990 Mieszko I, prince of Poland, united the southern and northern territories to form a powerful kingdom, and his son, Bolesław I (the Brave), later made Kraków the seat of a Polish…
- Viṣu (Hindu festival)
Vishu, spring festival observed by Malayali Hindus in Kerala and in adjacent areas of Tamil Nadu, India. Vishu (Sanskrit: “equal”) celebrates the vernal equinox, when day and night are roughly equal length. Although the astronomical equinox falls in late March, the Vishu festival falls on the first
- visual acuity (physiology)
human eye: Visual acuity: As has been stated, the ability to perceive detail is restricted in the dark-adapted retina when the illumination is such as to excite only the scotopic type of vision; this is in spite of the high sensitivity of the retina to light under…
- visual agnosia (pathology)
agnosia: Types of agnosia: Visual agnosias are often described as being either associative or apperceptive. Associative visual agnosias are characterized by the inability to ascribe meaning to the objects one sees. Affected individuals cannot distinguish between objects that are real and those that are not. For example, when presented…
- visual anthropology
anthropology: Visual anthropology: Visual anthropology is both the practice of anthropology through a visual medium and the study of visual phenomena in culture and society. Therein lie the promise and dilemma of the field. Associated with anthropology since the mid-to-late 19th century, it has not attained…
- visual approach slope indicator system
airport: Navigational aids: …aids are in use: the visual approach slope indicator system (VASIS) and the more modern precision approach path indicator (PAPI). Both work on the principle of guiding lights that show white when the pilot is above the proper glide slope and red when below.
- Visual Basic (computer language)
computer programming language: Visual Basic: Visual Basic was developed by Microsoft to extend the capabilities of BASIC by adding objects and “event-driven” programming: buttons, menus, and other elements of graphical user interfaces (GUIs). Visual Basic can also be used within other Microsoft software to program small routines. Visual…
- visual binary star (astronomy)
star: Stellar masses: …the mode of observation employed: visual binaries, spectroscopic binaries, and eclipsing binaries.
- visual cliff (perception research technology)
rationalism: Types and expressions of rationalism: …perception by experiments with “the visual cliff,” which, though platformed over with firm glass, the infant perceives as hazardous—though these native capacities may at times lie dormant until the appropriate conditions for their emergence arise.
- visual communications (art)
graphic design, the art and profession of selecting and arranging visual elements—such as typography, images, symbols, and colours—to convey a message to an audience. Sometimes graphic design is called “visual communications,” a term that emphasizes its function of giving form—e.g., the design of a
- visual cortex (anatomy)
human eye: Striate area: The optic tract fibres make synapses with nerve cells in the respective layers of the lateral geniculate body, and the axons of these third-order nerve cells pass upward to the calcarine fissure (a furrow) in each occipital lobe of the cerebral cortex. This…
- visual display (information recording)
information processing: Information display: For humans to perceive and understand information, it must be presented as print and image on paper; as print and image on film or on a video terminal; as sound via radio or telephony; as print, sound, and video in motion pictures, on television…
- visual field defect
visual field defect, a blind spot (scotoma) or blind area within the normal field of one or both eyes. In most cases the blind spots or areas are persistent, but in some instances they may be temporary and shifting, as in the scotomata of migraine headache. The visual fields of the right and left
- visual flight rule (aviation)
traffic control: Conventional control techniques: …flight control is called the visual flight rule, in which pilots fly with visual ground reference and a “see and be seen” flight rule. In congested airspace all pilots must obey the instrument flight rule; that is, they must depend principally on the information provided by the plane’s instruments for…
- visual gauge (measurement instrument)
gauge: …align work in machine tools; comparators, or visual gauges; and air gauges, which are used to gauge holes of various types. Very precise measurements may also be obtained by the use of light-wave interference, but the instruments that do so are referred to as interferometers.
- visual illusion
illusion: Optical phenomena: Numerous optical illusions are produced by the refraction (bending) of light as it passes through one substance to another in which the speed of light is significantly different. A ray of light passing from one transparent medium (air) to another (water) is bent as it emerges.…
- visual impairment
eye disease, any of the diseases or disorders that affect the human eye. This article briefly describes the more common diseases of the eye and its associated structures, the methods used in examination and diagnosis, and the factors that determine treatment and prognosis. The first part deals with
- visual meteorological conditions
airport: Navigational aids, lighting, and marking: …designed for operations conducted under visual meteorological conditions (VMC). These facilities operate only in daylight, and the only guidance they are required to offer is a painted runway centreline and large painted numbers indicating the magnetic bearing of the runway. Larger commercial airports, on the other hand, must also operate…
- visual migraine aura (pathology)
migraine: Migraine with aura: A visual migraine aura typically develops over the course of 4 to 5 minutes and then lasts for up to 60 minutes. It has a positive component, with flashing, shimmering lights, and a negative component, with a dark or gray area of diminished vision. This experience…
- visual perceptual illusion (perception)
illusion: Visual perceptual illusions: When an observer is confronted with a visual assortment of dots, the brain may group the dots that “belong together.” These groupings are made on the basis of such things as observed similarity (e.g., red versus black dots), proximity, common direction of…
- visual pigment (physiology)
visual pigment, any of a number of related substances that function in light reception by animals by transforming light energy into electrical (nerve) potentials. It is believed that all animals employ the same basic pigment structure, consisting of a coloured molecule, or chromophore (the
- visual purple (biochemistry)
rhodopsin, pigment-containing sensory protein that converts light into an electrical signal. Rhodopsin is found in a wide range of organisms, from vertebrates to bacteria. In many seeing animals, including humans, it is required for vision in dim light and is located in the retina of the
- Visual Sense-Data (work by Moore)
epistemology: Realism: …his last published paper, “Visual Sense-Data” (1957), abandoned direct realism. He held that because the elliptical sense-datum one perceives when one looks at a round coin cannot be identical with the coin’s circular surface, one cannot be seeing the coin directly. Hence, one cannot have direct knowledge of physical…
- visual space agnosia (pathology)
agnosia: Types of agnosia: Apperceptive visual agnosias, also known as visual space agnosias, are characterized by the inability to perceive the structure or shape of an object. Persons with apperceptive agnosias have difficulty matching objects of similar form. In most cases of associative or apperceptive visual agnosia, visual acuity…
- visual surveillance (police science)
police: Surveillance systems: Police conduct visual surveillance with binoculars, telescopes, cameras with telephoto lenses, video recorders, and closed-circuit television (CCTV). Cameras fitted with telescopic and other specialty lenses have become a standard covert surveillance tool. Night-vision devices, or “starlight scopes,” can be combined with telescopic lenses, both film and digital…
- visual system (anatomy)
amphibian: Common features: The eye of the modern amphibian (or lissamphibian) has a lid, associated glands, and ducts. It also has muscles that allow its accommodation within or on top of the head, depth perception, and true colour vision. These adaptations are regarded as the first evolutionary improvements in…
- visualization, computer
computer: Scientific and engineering software: Scientific visualization software couples high-performance graphics with the output of equation solvers to yield vivid displays of models of physical systems. As with spreadsheets, visualization software lets an experimenter vary initial conditions or parameters. Observing the effect of such changes can help in improving models, as…
- Visually Coupled Airborne Systems Simulator (device)
virtual reality: Education and training: …in 1982 he demonstrated the Visually Coupled Airborne Systems Simulator—better known as the Darth Vader helmet, for the armoured archvillain of the popular movie Star Wars. From 1986 to 1989, Furness directed the air force’s Super Cockpit program. The essential idea of this project was that the capacity of human…
- Visuddhimagga (work by Buddhaghosa)
Visuddhimagga, encyclopedic and masterful summary and exposition of the teaching of the Mahavihara school of Theravada Buddhism. It was written during the reign of the Sri Lankan king Mahanama in the 5th century ce by the great Buddhist commentator Buddhaghosa. Along with two other notable
- Viśva-Bhārati University (university, Śantiniketan, India)
West Bengal: Education: Vishva-Bharati University, in Shantiniketan (now part of Bolpur), is a world-famous centre for the study of Indology and international cultural relations.
- viśva-varja (Buddhist ritual object)
vajra: The viśva-vajra is a double vajra in the shape of a cross with four equal arms.
- Viśvanāth, Bālājī (Marāṭhā peshwa)
India: Rise of the peshwas: …figure of this line is Balaji Vishvanath, who had aided Shahu in his rise to power. Vishvanath and his successor, Baji Rao I (peshwa between 1720 and 1740), managed to bureaucratize the Maratha state to a far greater extent than had been the case under the early Bhonsles. On the…
- Viśvāntara (Buddha)
Vessantara, in Buddhist mythology, a previous incarnation of the Buddha Gotama. A crown prince, Vessantara was famous for his vast generosity, and, to the despair of his more practical-minded father, he accepted banishment to the forest, where he attained the ultimate self-abnegation by giving away
- Vita Adae et Evae (Jewish literature)
Life of Adam and Eve, pseudepigraphal work (a noncanonical writing that in style and content resembles authentic biblical works), one of many Jewish and Christian stories that embellish the account of Adam and Eve as given in the biblical Genesis. Biography was an extremely popular literary genre
- Vita Anselmi (work by Eadmer)
Edmer: …and clerical authorities, and the Vita Anselmi (c. 1124), an authoritative biography of Anselm’s private life. Edmer’s importance in historiography rests on his powers of critical observation and description, a novel emphasis on psychological factors in biographical writing, and a clear recognition of the implications of the Investiture Controversy.
- Vita Brevis (novel by Gaarder)
Jostein Gaarder: Gaarder’s later novels included Vita Brevis (1996; published in English as Vita Brevis and That Same Flower), Sirkusdirektørens datter (2001; The Ringmaster’s Daughter), Slottet i Pyreneene (2008; The Castle in the Pyrenees), and Dukkeføreren (2016; “The Puppet Master”).
- vita bugiarda degli adulti, La (novel by Ferrante)
Elena Ferrante: My Brilliant Friend series and later novels: …vita bugiarda degli adulti (The Lying Life of Adults). In 2019, when the book was published in Italy, fans were so eager to get their hands on a Ferrante novel after a five-year wait that they lined up at bookstores for the midnight release. The story centres around Giovanna…
- vita di Castruccio Castracani da Lucca, La (work by Machiavelli)
Niccolò Machiavelli: Early life and political career: …government and to compose his The Life of Castruccio Castracani of Lucca (1520; La vita di Castruccio Castracani da Lucca). Later that year the cardinal agreed to have Machiavelli elected official historian of the republic, a post to which he was appointed in November 1520 with a salary of 57…
- Vita di Dante Alighieri (work by Boccaccio)
Giovanni Boccaccio: Petrarch and Boccaccio’s mature years: His Vita di Dante Alighieri, or Trattatello in laude di Dante (“Little Tractate in Praise of Dante”), and the two abridged editions of it that he made show his devotion to Dante’s memory.
- Vita è bella, La (film by Benigni [1997])
Roberto Benigni: Life Is Beautiful, however, established Benigni as an international star. The movie—which he wrote, directed, and acted in—was released in the United States in 1998 and became one of the highest-grossing non-English-language films in American box-office history. At the 1999 Academy Awards ceremony, Benigni became…
- Vita Karoli imperatoris (work by Einhard)
Einhard: Einhard probably wrote his Vita Karoli Magni (“Life of Charles the Great”) about 830–833, after he had left Aachen and was living in Seligenstadt. Based on 23 years of service to Charlemagne and research in the royal annals, the book was expressly intended to convey Einhard’s gratitude for Charlemagne’s…
- Vita Karoli Magni (work by Einhard)
Einhard: Einhard probably wrote his Vita Karoli Magni (“Life of Charles the Great”) about 830–833, after he had left Aachen and was living in Seligenstadt. Based on 23 years of service to Charlemagne and research in the royal annals, the book was expressly intended to convey Einhard’s gratitude for Charlemagne’s…
- Vita Merlini (work by Geoffrey of Monmouth)
Morgan le Fay: Geoffrey of Monmouth’s Vita Merlini (c. 1150) named her as the ruler of Avalon, a marvelous island where King Arthur was to be healed of his wounds, and it described her as skilled in the arts of healing and of changing shape. In Chrétien de Troyes’s romance of…
- vita nuova, La (work by Dante)
La vita nuova, work written about 1293 by Dante regarding his feelings for Beatrice, who comes to represent for Dante the ideal woman. La vita nuova describes Dante’s first sight of Beatrice when both are nine years of age, her salutation when they are 18, Dante’s expedients to conceal his love for
- Vita Radegundis (work by Fortunatus)
Venantius Fortunatus: …biographies of saints (including the Vita Radegundis); and 11 books of poems (with an appendix of 34 poems). His early poems are courtly; they include addresses to bishops and officials, panegyrics, an epithalamium, epigrams, and occasional poems. While showing a pleasing facility, their dominant characteristic is a strongly rhetorical flavour.…
- Vita S. Columbae (work by Adamnan)
Saint Adamnan: Adamnan’s Vita S. Columbae, in which he describes the saint’s prophecies, miracles, and visions, is one of the most important hagiographies ever written. He was also the author of De locis sanctis (“Concerning the Sacred Places”), a narrative of the pilgrimage (c. 680) made to the…
- Vita S. Martini (work by Sulpicius Severus)
Sulpicius Severus: …most famous work is the Vita S. Martini, the first draft of which was written before Martin’s death in 397, but supplementary matter relating to Martin is added in all his subsequent versions, including three authentic letters. In 400 he wrote Chronica, 2 vol., (c. 402–404), sacred histories from the…