| | - 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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