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Bydgoszcz Canal ... 
Bydgoszcz Canal
canal in north-central Poland that links the Vistula River basin with that of the Oder ... [2 Related Articles]
Bydgoszcz, Treaty of
(from the article "Poland") ...switched his support to John Casimir and thereby received the recognition of full sovereignty over ...
bye
(from the article "cricket") Only runs scored from the bat count to the batsman, but to the side's score ...
Bye Plot
(from the article "Watson, William") English Roman Catholic priest who was executed for his part in the "Bye Plot" against ...
Byer, Renee C.
(from the article "Art and Art Exhibitions") ...Achievement in recognition of his years of documentary photography in his home country. Pulitzer Prizes ...
Byerly Turk
(from the article "horse racing") ...papers. After a few years of revision, it was updated annually. All Thoroughbreds are said ...
Byerly, Perry E.
(from the article "earthquake") In 1926 the American geophysicist Perry E. Byerly used patterns of P onsets over the ...
Bykau, Vasil Uladzamiravich
Belarusian novelist (b. June 19, 1924, Bychki, Belorussia, U.S.S.R.-d. June 22, 2003, Minsk, Belarus), eschewed ... [1 Related Articles]
Bykov, Dmitry
(from the article "Literature") ...of, literary biographies, led by the prestigious publishing houses Molodaya Gvardiya and Vita Nova. The ...
Bykovsky, Valery
Soviet cosmonaut who orbited the Earth 81 times in the spacecraft Vostok 5, from June ...
bylina
traditional form of Old Russian and Russian heroic narrative poetry transmitted orally, still a creative ... [2 Related Articles]
Byloke, Abbey of
(from the article "Ghent") ...many famous medieval monasteries, the most notable are the ruined 7th-century St. Bavon's Abbey (birthplace ...
Bylot, Robert
(from the article "Baffin Bay") The first European visitor to explore the bay was Robert Bylot, an English sea captain, ...
Byng of Vimy, Julian Hedworth George Byng, Viscount
British field marshal, a commander in World War I.
Byng, John
British admiral executed for failing to relieve the naval base at Minorca (in the western ...
Bynkershoek, Cornelis van
Dutch jurist who helped develop international law along positivist lines. [1 Related Articles]
byobu
(from the article "arts, East Asian") Important secular works from the 11th century, such as Shotoku taishi eden ("Illustrated Biography of ...
Byodo Temple
(from the article "arts, East Asian") One of the most elegant monuments to Amidist faith is the Phoenix Hall (Hoo-do) at ...
Byoir, Carl
American consultant who helped establish public relations as a recognized profession.
bypass ratio
(from the article "jet engine") A key parameter for classifying the turbofan is its bypass ratio, defined as the ratio ...
Byrd, Charlie
American jazz musician who was schooled in both jazz and classical music; he played modern ...
Byrd, Chris
(from the article "Boxing") ...drug. Nikolay Valuev (Russia) won a controversial 12-round decision over Ruiz on December 17 in ...
Byrd, Harry F.
(from the article "U.S. presidential election results") ...Thomas Martin, U.S. senator from Virginia from 1893 to 1919, organized a Democratic program that ...
Byrd, Richard E.
U.S. naval officer, pioneer aviator, and polar explorer best known for his explorations of Antarctica ... [8 Related Articles]
Byrd, William
English organist and composer of the Shakespearean age who is best known for his development ... [4 Related Articles]
Byrd, William, of Westover
Virginia planter, satirist, and diarist who portrayed colonial life on the southern British plantations. [1 Related Articles]
Byrds, the
American band of the 1960s who popularized folk rock, particularly the songs of Bob Dylan, ... [2 Related Articles]
Byrhtferth of Ramsey
English monk, among the most learned and well-read scholars of the 10th and 11th centuries, ... [1 Related Articles]
Byrhthnoth, Earl
(from the article "Battle of Maldon, The") ...either side of a stream (the present River Blackwater near Maldon, Essex). The Vikings offer ...
Byrne, Barry
U.S. architect who emerged from the Prairie school of architecture influenced by Frank Lloyd Wright ...
Byrne, David
(from the article "1987: Other Winners") ...Peploe and Bernardo Bertolucci for The Last EmperorCinematography: Vittorio Storaro for The Last EmperorArt Direction: ...
Byrne, Jane
(from the article "Chicago") ...21-year reign, which ended with his death in December 1976. After him followed a series ...
Byrne, Simon
(from the article "Burke, James") ...was hearing impaired from infancy, worked on the River Thames as a waterman before beginning ...
Byrnes, James F.
Democratic Party politician and administrator who, during World War II, was popularly known as "assistant ... [4 Related Articles]
byrnie
(from the article "military technology") ...difference between the body armour of the western European knight and the Roman legionnaire's lorica ...
Byrom, John
English poet, hymnist, and inventor of a system of shorthand.
Byron Bay
town, northeastern New South Wales, Australia. The town is situated on Cape Byron, easternmost point ...
Byron, George de Luna
(from the article "forgery") ...a certain specious glamour like Constantine Simonides (1824-67), a Greek adventurer who varied his trade ...
Byron, George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron
British Romantic poet and satirist whose poetry and personality captured the imagination of Europe. Renowned ... [15 Related Articles]
Byron, John
British admiral, whose account (1768) of a shipwreck in South America was to some extent ... [2 Related Articles]
Byron, John
(from the article "Byron, George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron") Byron was the son of the handsome and profligate Captain John "Mad Jack" Byron and ...
Byron, John Byron, 1st Baron
English Cavalier and Royalist during the Civil Wars.
Byrranga Mountains
(from the article "Russia") ...side is bounded by the Eastern Sayan and Baikal (Baikalia) mountains; to the north it ...
byssal retractor muscle
(from the article "bivalve") ...(and enlargement of the posterior equivalents). Since such muscles are less concerned with locomotion and ...
byssinosis
respiratory disorder caused by inhalation of an endotoxin produced by bacteria in the fibres of ... [2 Related Articles]
byssus
(from the article "ark shell") ...seas, with only a few species occurring in temperate areas. Ark shells are slow-moving or ...
Bystrom, Johan
(from the article "Western sculpture") ...of Christ in the Church of Our Lady in Copenhagen, exhibits a deliberately chilling, sublime ...
byte
the basic unit of information in computer storage and processing. A byte consists of 8 ... [2 Related Articles]
Bythinidae
(from the article "gastropod") ...Many slugs accidentally introduced from Europe to both the West Coastal and the Eastern to ...
Bytom
city, Slaskie wojewodztwo (province), southern Poland. It is one of the oldest ...
bytownite
(from the article "Composition of the plagioclase minerals") ...N.Y., United States. Andesine, less common, occurs in many granular and volcanic rocks with intermediate ...
Byzacena
(from the article "North Africa") ...Administrative changes introduced at this time included the division of the province of Africa into ...
Byzantine architecture
(from the article "Byzantine art") The earliest Byzantine architecture, though determined by the longitudinal basilica (q.v.) church plan developed in ...
Byzantine art
architecture, paintings, and other visual arts produced in the Middle Ages in the Byzantine Empire ... [34 Related Articles]
Byzantine chant
monophonic, or unison, liturgical chant of the Greek Orthodox church during the Byzantine Empire (330-1453) ... [5 Related Articles]
Byzantine Empire
the eastern half of the Roman Empire, which survived for ... [104 Related Articles]
Byzantine Greek language
an archaic style of Greek that served as the language of administration and of most ... [1 Related Articles]
Byzantine Greek literature
(from the article "Greek literature") Byzantine literatureGreek scholarshipclassical scholarshipChristian versus ...
Byzantine minuscule
(from the article "classical scholarship") ...The Italians acquired it from the Byzantines, and by the 13th century they had developed ...
Byzantine neumatic notation
(from the article "Byzantine chant") Documents with Byzantine neumatic notation date only from the 10th century. Earlier, there was in ...
Byzantine rite
the system of liturgical practices and discipline observed by the Eastern Orthodox church and by ... [4 Related Articles]
Byzas
(from the article "Istanbul") The name Byzantium may derive from that of Byzas, who, according to legend, was leader ...
BZ
(from the article "chemical weapon") ...done on chemicals that can incapacitate, disorient, or paralyze opponents. Experiments have been conducted on ...
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