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Gergonne, Joseph-Diez ... germinal mutation
Gergonne, Joseph-Diez
(from the article "logic, history of") ...Sturm and were more frequently used by Johann C. Lange in 1712. (Vives had employed ...
Gerhaert von Leyden, Nikolaus
master sculptor who was one of the most significant artists of his time in the ... [1 Related Articles]
Gerhard, Eduard
(from the article "classical scholarship") The foundation of the Instituto di Correspondenza Archeologica in Rome in 1829 provided an international ...
Gerhard, Johann
leading German Protestant theologian, biblical scholar, renowned polemicist, author of the standard Lutheran dogmatic treatise ...
Gerhard, Wolfgang
(from the article "Mengele, Josef") ...name in Uruguay in 1958 and, as "Jose Mengele," received citizenship in Paraguay in 1959. ...
Gerhardsen, Einar
four-time prime minister of Norway (1945, 1945-51, 1955-63, 1963-65) and leader of the Norwegian Labour ... [1 Related Articles]
Gerhardt, Charles
French chemist who was an important precursor of the German chemist August Kekule and his ... [2 Related Articles]
Gerhardt, Elena
mezzo-soprano, one of the most accomplished singers of German lieder of her time.
Gerhart, Hubert
(from the article "Western sculpture") In the north of Europe, Giambologna's influence was paramount. Both Hubert Gerhart and Adriaan de ...
geriatric dentistry
(from the article "dentistry") Geriatric dentistry is concerned with the oral health of elderly persons, who usually have significant ...
geriatrics
(from the article "gerontology and geriatrics") scientific and medical disciplines, respectively, that are concerned with all aspects of health and disease ...
Gericault, Theodore
painter who exerted a seminal influence on the development of Romantic art in France. Gericault ... [5 Related Articles]
Gerin-Lajoie, Antoine
writer, librarian, and leader in the early literary movement of French Canada. [1 Related Articles]
Gerizim, Mount
mountain located in the West Bank just south of Nablus, near the site of biblical ...
Gerke, Anton
(from the article "Mussorgsky, Modest") ...Filaret, to St. Petersburg, where Modest attended the Peter-Paul School in preparation for a military ...
Gerlach, Helmut von
German pacifist journalist and politician, a consistent opponent of German nationalism, whose writings exercised a ...
Gerlach, Leopold von
the eldest of three brothers prominent in German conservatism during the first half of the ...
Gerlach, Ludwig von
Prussian judge, politician, and editor who helped found the conservative newspaper Kreuzzeitung (1848), which became ...
Gerlach, Mount
(from the article "Europe") ...altitudes. The highest peaks in these ranges are Mount Corno (9,554 feet) in the Abruzzi ...
Gerlach, Otto von
Prussian Lutheran theologian and educator, younger brother of Leopold and Ludwig von Gerlach.
Gerlach, Walther
German physicist noted especially for his work with Otto Stern on the deflections of atoms ... [4 Related Articles]
Gerlache de Gomery, Adrien-Victor-Joseph, baron de
Belgian naval officer who led the first Antarctic expedition concentrating on scientific observation (1897-99). Sailing ... [2 Related Articles]
Gerlache Strait
(from the article "Palmer, Nathaniel") ...explorer Fabien Gottlieb von Bellingshausen and English explorer Edward Bransfield also claimed to have been ...
Gerlache, Etienne-Constantin, baron de
Belgian Catholic statesman and historian and a parliamentary leader in the first years of the ...
germ cell
(from the article "Plasmodium") ...form), P. ovale (relatively uncommon), P. falciparum (producing the most severe symptoms), and P. malariae. ...
germ layer
(from the article "Derivatives of primary germ layers") An adult, multicellular animal typically possesses a concentric arrangement of tissues of the body. These ...
germ theory
in medicine, the theory that certain diseases are caused by the invasion of the body ... [1 Related Articles]
germ tube
(from the article "fungus") ...off the parent cell and become individual yeast cells. Buds that are pinched off a ...
germ-plasm theory
concept of the physical basis of heredity expressed by the 19th-century biologist August Weismann (q.v.). ... [4 Related Articles]
Germain, Francois-Thomas
last of the distinguished Germain family of Parisian silversmiths. He took over the family workshop ...
Germain, Pierre
first notable member of a distinguished family of Parisian silversmiths.
Germain, Sophie
French mathematician who contributed notably to the study of acoustics, elasticity, and the theory of ... [4 Related Articles]
Germain, Sylvie
(from the article "French literature") Writers offered radically different versions of life in the contemporary world. Sylvie Germain's magic realism ...
Germain, Thomas
French silversmith, perhaps the best-known member of a distinguished family of silversmiths.
German
(from the article "Milwaukee") European immigration was largely responsible for Milwaukee's growth. German settlers played an important and sustained ...
German 88
versatile 88-millimetre (3.46-inch) multirole artillery piece, developed from 1917 by Germany. It was tested in ...
German Antarctica Expedition of 1939
(from the article "Antarctica") ...on Nov. 23, 1935, in Ellsworth Land (an area now claimed by Chile) and on ...
German Atlantic Expedition
(from the article "Wust, Georg") Wust received his doctorate from the University of Berlin in 1919. After the death of ...
German bassoon
(from the article "wind instrument") ...the classic bassoon. Although the Heckel family (Johann Adam Heckel and Wilhelm, his son and ...
German Book Prize
(from the article "Literature") The German Book Prize was awarded in 2007 to Julia Franck for her novel Die ...
German Christian
any of the Protestants who attempted to subordinate church policy to the political initiatives of ... [4 Related Articles]
German Christians' Faith Movement
(from the article "German Christian") any of the Protestants who attempted to subordinate church policy to the political initiatives of ...
German Church Struggle
(from the article "Lutheranism") ...The remainder of the decade was marked by continued theological and political confrontation between the ...
German Civil Code
the body of codified private law that went into effect in the German empire in ... [10 Related Articles]
German Civil War
(from the article "Germany") Although he intended to cooperate with Henry IV at the outset of his papacy, Gregory ...
German Civil War
(from the article "Germany") Rupert (ruled 1400-10) lacked the skill and resources necessary to revive the drooping power of ...
German Civil War
(from the article "Germany") ...interests in the Romagna tempted the papacy to exploit the weaknesses of the empire's constitution, ...
German Civil War
(from the article "Germany") The death of Henry VII led to a disputed election and a civil war in ...
German cockroach
(from the article "cockroach") The German cockroach (Blattella germanica), a common household pest sometimes erroneously called a waterbug, is ...
German Code of Civil Procedure
(from the article "procedural law") ...may convene a conference of the parties to discuss a possible settlement. The court must, ...
German Confederation
organization of 39 German states, established by the Congress of Vienna in 1815 to replace ... [8 Related Articles]
German Conservative Party
(from the article "Junker") ...first was regarded as representing its interests. Politically, Junkers stood for extreme conservatism, support of ...
German Democratic Party
(from the article "Europe, history of") Elections to a constitutional convention, or assembly, were held on Jan. 19, 1919. They gave ...
German Democratic Republic
(from the article "German Democratic Republic") former country (1949-90) that constitutes the northeastern section of present-day Germany (q.v.).TABLEleaders of Germany
German East Africa
former dependency of imperial Germany, corresponding to present-day Rwanda and Burundi, the continental portion of ... [2 Related Articles]
German East Africa Company
(from the article "Bagamoyo") ...(75 km) northwest of Dar es Salaam. The town was formerly a slave-trading depot at ...
German Empire
(from the article "Germany") The German Empire was founded on January 18, 1871, in the aftermath of three successful ...
German Evangelical Church
(from the article "German Christian") In July 1933 the Protestant churches of the various German federal states merged to form ...
German Expressionism
(from the article "Beckmann, Max") German Expressionist painter and printmaker whose works are notable for the boldness and power of ...
German Farmers Federation
(from the article "Lubke, Heinrich") After serving in World War I he was able to unify many small German farmers' ...
German Girls, League of
(from the article "Hitler Youth") Two leagues also existed for girls. The League of German Girls (Bund Deutscher Madel) trained ...
German idealism
(from the article "philosophy, Western") The Enlightenment, inspired by the example of natural science, had accepted certain boundaries to human ...
German iris
(from the article "Iris") Best known are the bearded, or German, group-the common garden irises. These are hybrids of ...
German ivy
(from the article "groundsel") ...flower heads. Ragwort, or tansy ragwort (S. jacobaea; see photograph); cineraria, or dusty miller (S. ...
German language
official language of both Germany and Austria and one of the three official languages of ... [15 Related Articles]
German law
(from the article "civil law") Roman law, as embodied in the Corpus Juris Civilis, was "received" in Germany from the ...
German literature
German literature comprises the written works of the German-speaking peoples of central Europe. It has ... [41 Related Articles]
German Mass
(from the article "benediction") ...to invocations pronounced in God's name by a priest or minister, usually at the conclusion ...
German National Constituent Assembly
(from the article "Stresemann, Gustav") Stresemann, a member of the German National Constituent Assembly in Weimar in 1919-20, was an ...
German National Museum
museum in Nurnberg, Ger., housing Europe's largest and most comprehensive collection of German art and ... [1 Related Articles]
German National Opera
(from the article "Berlin") ...as one of the leading opera houses of the Western world. The Opera House in ...
German National People's Party
right-wing political party active in the Reichstag (assembly) of the Weimar Republic of Germany from ... [2 Related Articles]
German National Theatre
(from the article "Germany") ...Germany all theatres were state-owned. The German Theatre (Deutsches Theater) in Berlin reopened in September ...
German New Guinea Company
(from the article "Pacific Islands") Other countries had different patterns. The Germans tried to administer their colonies through commercial companies, ...
German Pavilion
(from the article "Mies van der Rohe, Ludwig") Perhaps Mies's most famous executed project of the interwar period in Europe was the German ...
German Peace Society
(from the article "Quidde, Ludwig") ...for lese majesty. From 1907 to 1919 Quidde was a liberal member of the Bavarian ...
German People's Party
(from the article "Stresemann, Gustav") ...when the newly formed left-liberal German Democratic Party, led by Naumann and the renowned sociologist ...
German People's Union
(from the article "Germany") Of Germany's small fringe parties, only the rightist Republican Party and the DVU, together with ...
German reunification
(from the article "fascism") ...support among disaffected youth in parts of the former East Germany, where there were high ...
German Salaried Employees' Union
white-collar labour organization in Germany. The DAG was organized in 1945, shortly after the end ...
German shepherd
breed of working dog developed in Germany from traditional herding and farm dogs. Until the ... [1 Related Articles]
German Shipping Museum
(from the article "museum, types of") ...has been the maritime museum. Like other types of museums, it may be housed in ...
German shorthaired pointer
(from the article "Selected breeds of sporting dogs") The German shorthaired pointer is another sporting breed. Developed in Germany, it is an all-purpose ...
German South West Africa
a former German colony (1884-1919) that is now the nation of Namibia, in southwestern Africa. ... [1 Related Articles]
German State Library
(from the article "library") ...library. The former Preussische Staatsbibliothek was given national status in 1919. That library became East ...
German Tariff
(from the article "international trade") ...by a minute definition of a particular item so that a concession, while general in ...
German Trade Union Federation
dominant union organization in Germany. The DGB was founded in Munich in 1949 and soon ... [1 Related Articles]
German wirehaired pointer
breed of sporting dog developed in mid-19th-century Germany as an all-purpose, all-weather hunting dog. It ...
German Young People
(from the article "Hitler Youth") Upon reaching his 10th birthday, a German boy was registered and investigated (especially for "racial ...
German, Sir Edward
popular composer of light operas whose music was noted for its lyric quality and distinctly ...
German-American Bund
American pro-Nazi, quasi-military organization that was most active in the years immediately preceding the United ... [2 Related Articles]
German-Danish War
(from the article "Denmark") Under the leadership of Otto von Bismarck, Prussia reacted immediately: in February 1864, war broke ...
German-Soviet Nonaggression Pact
(August 23, 1939), nonaggression pact between Germany and the Soviet Union that was concluded only ... [14 Related Articles]
germanate
(from the article "germanium") ...germanium appreciably. Although aqueous caustic solutions produce little effect on it, germanium dissolves rapidly in ...
germander
any of about 250 species of plants belonging to the genus Teucrium, which is a ...
germane
(from the article "Atmospheric abundances for Jupiter") ...to be major constituents of the deeper atmosphere but have not yet been detected. Minor ...
Germania Inferior
(from the article "Low Countries, history of") ...and to the south and west of the Rhine, the Romans set up the same ...
Germania Superior
(from the article "France") ...the limes, assumed its final shape, as a defended palisade and ditch, ...
Germanic facies
(from the article "Triassic Period") ...rocks. (The name Trias referred to the division of these strata into three units: the ...
Germanic languages
branch of the Indo-European language family. Scholars often divide the Germanic languages into three groups: ... [11 Related Articles]
Germanic law
the law of the various Germanic peoples from the time of their initial contact with ... [12 Related Articles]
Germanic peoples
any of the Indo-European speakers of Germanic languages. [31 Related Articles]
Germanic religion and mythology
complex of stories, lore, and beliefs about the gods and the nature of the cosmos ... [7 Related Articles]
Germanicum
(from the article "Loyola, Saint Ignatius of") Loyola left his mark on Rome. He founded the Roman College, embryo of the Gregorian ...
Germanicus Julius Caesar
nephew and adopted son of the Roman emperor Tiberius (reigned AD 14-37). He was a ... [2 Related Articles]
germanium
a chemical element between silicon and tin in Group 14 (IVa) of the periodic table, ... [19 Related Articles]
germanium coaxial detector
(from the article "Table 5: Applications of Radiation Interactions in Detectors") The most common type of germanium gamma-ray spectrometer consists of a high-purity (mildly p-type) crystal ...
germanium detector
(from the article "radiation measurement") Semiconductor detectors also can be used in gamma-ray spectroscopy. In this case, however, it is ...
germanium telluride
(from the article "crystal") ...as lead sulfide. Heavier elements from the fourth column of the periodic table (germanium, tin, ...
Germantown
historic residential section of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S., extending for more than a mile along Germantown ... [1 Related Articles]
Germantown yarn
(from the article "textile") ...are generally of two or more ply. They include such types as fingering yarns, usually ...
Germantown, Battle of
(October 4, 1777), in the American Revolution, abortive attack by 11,000 American troops upon 9,000 ... [3 Related Articles]
Germanus I, Saint
Byzantine patriarch of Constantinople and theologian who led the orthodox opposition during the Iconoclastic Controversy ... [2 Related Articles]
Germanus of Auxerre, Saint
Gallic prelate who was twice sent on crucial missions to England that helped effect the ...
Germanus of Paris, Saint
abbot, bishop, one of France's most revered saints, who was an important, though unsuccessful, mediator ...
Germany
country of north-central Europe, traversing the continent's main physical divisions, from the outer ranges of ... [350 Related Articles]
Germany, flag of
horizontally striped national flag of black, red, and "gold" (i.e., golden-yellow); when used for official ...
Germany, history of
(from the article "Germany") Historybefore 1945Alsace-LorraineAlsace-LorraineBecause of its ancient ...
Germany, West
(from the article "West Germany") from 1949 to 1990, a republic consisting of the western two-thirds of what is now ...
germarium
(from the article "insect") ...consists of a number of ovarioles. The ovarioles converge upon the two oviducts, and the ...
Germer, Lester Halbert
American physicist who, with his colleague Clinton Joseph Davisson, conducted an experiment (1927) that first ... [2 Related Articles]
germfree life
biological condition characterized by the complete absence of living microorganisms. Gnotobiology comprises the study of ...
Germi, Pietro
(from the article "1962: Other Winners") Original Screenplay: Ennio de Concini, Alfredo Giannetti, Pietro Germi for Divorce .Italian StyleAdapted Screenplay: Horton ...
germicide
(from the article "Classification and survey of antiseptics and germicides") The term antiseptic refers to agents applied to the living tissues of humans, other animals, ...
germinal centre
(from the article "spleen") ...that reach the bloodstream. Phagocytic cells in both red and white pulp serve to remove ...
germinal mutation
alteration in the genetic constitution of the reproductive cells, occurring in the cell divisions that ... [1 Related Articles]
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