| 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") History
before 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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