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Mably, Gabriel de ... MacEntyre, Eduardo
Mably, Gabriel de
(from the article "Europe, history of") ...(1755), attacked property as the parent of crime and proposed that every man should contribute ...
Mabuchi Toichi
(from the article "anthropology") ...Japanese anthropology and anthropology in the United States and Europe. Two Japanese anthropologists were particularly ...
mabuya
(from the article "skink") Some of the more common genera are described below. Keeled skinks (Tropidophorus), ...
Mac Dang Dung
(from the article "Vietnam") The first and shorter division of the country occurred soon after the elimination of Champa. ...
Mac Family
Vietnamese clan that established a dynasty ruling the Tonkin area of northern Vietnam from 1527 ... [2 Related Articles]
Mac Lane, Saunders
American mathematician who was a cocreator of category theory, an architect of homological algebra, and ... [5 Related Articles]
Mac, Bernie
American comedian and actor earned two Emmy nominations (2002 and 2003) for his portrayal of ...
Mac, Project
(from the article "computer") ...the Soviet Union in 1957. ARPA researched interesting technological areas, and under Licklider's leadership it ...
Mac-Mahon, Marie-Edme-Patrice-Maurice, comte de (count of), Duc De (duke of) Magenta
marshal of France and second president of the Third French Republic. During his presidency the ... [8 Related Articles]
macadam
form of pavement invented by John McAdam of Scotland in the 18th century. McAdam's road ... [3 Related Articles]
macadamia
(Macadamia), any of about 10 species of ornamental evergreen tree belonging to the family Proteaceae, ...
Macadamia integrifolia
(from the article "macadamia") Macadamias originated in the coastal rain forests and scrubs of what is now Queensland in ...
Macadamia tetraphylla
(from the article "macadamia") ...in northeastern Australia. The macadamias grown commercially in Hawaii and Australia are principally of two ...
Macaire
title often assigned to a French medieval epic poem, or chanson de geste, after one ...
Macanaz, Melchor de
(from the article "Spain") ...of centralizing reform were French civil servants Jean-Jacques Amelot, Louis XIV's ambassador, and Jean-Henri-Louis Orry, ...
Macapa
city, capital of Amapa estado (state), northern Brazil, on the northern channel ... [1 Related Articles]
Macapagal, Diosdado
reformist president of the Philippines from 1961 to 1965. [1 Related Articles]
macapat
(from the article "Indonesia") ...of central and eastern Java, for instance, use pantun structure to recount religious or local ...
macaque
any of about 20 species of gregarious Old World monkeys, all of which are Asian ... [2 Related Articles]
Macarian literature
(from the article "Macarius the Egyptian") The Macarian literature appealed to certain Lutheran devotional writers, such as Johann Arndt in the ...
Macarius
Russian metropolitan (archbishop) of Moscow and head of the Russian Church during the period of ...
Macarius Magnes
Eastern Orthodox bishop and polemicist, author of an apology for the Christian faith, a document ...
Macarius the Egyptian
monk and ascetic who, as one of the Desert Fathers, advanced the ideal of monasticism ... [1 Related Articles]
macaroni
in art, Late Paleolithic finger tracings in clay. It is one of the oldest and ... [1 Related Articles]
macaroni
(from the article "macaroni") small tubular form of pasta (q.v.).TABLEenergy values of foods
macaronic
originally, comic Latin verse form characterized by the introduction of vernacular words with appropriate but ... [2 Related Articles]
macaronic poetry
(from the article "Italian literature") ...during the century. Fidenziana poetry derives its name from a work by Camillo Scroffa, a ...
macaroon
cookie or small cake made of sugar, egg white, and almonds, ground or in paste ...
MacArthur Foundation Fellowship
(from the article "Art and Art Exhibitions") ...the Vincent van Gogh Biennial Award for Contemporary Art in Europe, given to honour European ...
MacArthur, Charles
American journalist, dramatist, and screenwriter, a colourful personality who is remembered for his comedies written ... [2 Related Articles]
MacArthur, Douglas
U.S. general who commanded the Southwest Pacific Theatre in World War II, administered postwar Japan ... [20 Related Articles]
MacArthur, Ellen
On Feb. 7, 2005, English yachtswoman Ellen MacArthur became a new legend in British maritime ... [1 Related Articles]
Macarthur, John
(christened Sept. 3, 1767, Stoke Damerel, Devonshire, Eng.-d. April 11, 1834, Camden, New South Wales), ... [4 Related Articles]
Macartney, George Macartney, Earl, Viscount Macartney of Dervock, baron of Lissanoure, Baron Macartney of Parkhurst and of Auchinleck, Lord Macartney
first British emissary to Beijing. [1 Related Articles]
Macas
town, southeastern Ecuador. It lies on the Upano River along the eastern slopes of the ...
Macassar ebony tree
(from the article "ebony") The best Indian and Ceylon ebony is produced by Diospyros ebenum, which grows in abundance ...
Macau
special administrative region (Pinyin tebie xingzhengqu; Wade-Giles t'e-pieh hsing-cheng-ch'u) ... [11 Related Articles]
Macau
(from the article "Macau") ...the mainland sheng (province) of Kwangtung and includes the islands of Taipa ...
Macaulay, Catharine
British historian and radical political writer.
Macaulay, Dame Rose
author of novels and travel books characterized by intelligence, wit, and lively scholarship.
Macaulay, Hannah
(from the article "Macaulay, Thomas Babington Macaulay, Baron") ...mother, a Quaker, was the daughter of a Bristol bookseller. Thomas was the eldest of ...
Macaulay, Thomas Babington Macaulay, Baron
English Whig politician, essayist, poet, and historian best known for his History ... [10 Related Articles]
Macaulay, Zachary
(from the article "Macaulay, Thomas Babington Macaulay, Baron") Macaulay was born in the house of an uncle in Leicestershire. His father, Zachary Macaulay, ...
Macauley
(from the article "Kermadec Islands") Curtis and Macauley were discovered (1788) by the crew of the British ship "Lady Penrhyn." ...
macaw
common name of about 18 species of large colourful parrots native to tropical America. These ... [2 Related Articles]
Macaya Peak
(from the article "Haiti") ...Mount Selle, the highest point in the country. The range's western extension on the southern ...
Macbeth
king of Scots from 1040, the legend of whose life was the basis of Shakespeare's ... [4 Related Articles]
Macbeth
tragedy in five acts by William Shakespeare, written sometime in 1606-07 and published in the ... [17 Related Articles]
Macbeth
a general in King Duncan's army who is spurred on by the prophecy of the ... [1 Related Articles]
MacBeth, George Mann
British poet and novelist whose verse ranged from moving personal elegies, highly contrived poetic jokes, ...
Macbeth, Lady
wife of Macbeth in Shakespeare's Macbeth. A strong, rational, and calculating woman, ... [1 Related Articles]
MacBride, John
(from the article "Yeats, William Butler") In 1899 Yeats asked Maud Gonne to marry him, but she declined. Four years later ...
MacBride, Sean
Irish statesman who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1974 for his efforts ... [2 Related Articles]
Maccabees
priestly family of Jews who organized a successful rebellion against the Seleucid ruler Antiochus IV ... [9 Related Articles]
Maccabees, The Books of the
four books, none of which is in the Hebrew Bible but all of which appear ... [4 Related Articles]
Maccabeus, Eleazar
(from the article "Maccabees") ...(I Maccabees 5:63). The Syrians, in the war against him, fastened wooden towers on elephants' ...
Maccabeus, Jonathan
Jewish general, a son of the priest Mattathias, who took over the leadership of the ... [4 Related Articles]
Maccabeus, Judas
Jewish guerrilla leader who defended his country from invasion by the Seleucid king Antiochus IV ... [11 Related Articles]
Maccabeus, Simon
(from the article "Palestine") ...Alexander Balas, in order to outplay the legitimate king, Demetrius, granted Jonathan the office of ...
Maccabiah Games
international games held in Palestine (later Israel) from 1932, sponsored by the World Maccabi Union, ... [1 Related Articles]
MacCaig, Norman
one of the most important Scottish poets of the 20th century. [1 Related Articles]
MacCarthy Island
island, in the Gambia River, 176 miles (283 km) upstream from Banjul, central Gambia. It ... [1 Related Articles]
MacCarthy, Sir Desmond
English journalist who, as a weekly columnist for the New Statesman known as the "Affable ...
Macchiaioli
group of 19th-century Florentine and Neopolitan painters who reacted against the rule-bound Italian academies of ... [1 Related Articles]
Maccido, Muhammadu
19th sultan of Sokoto (b. April 20, 1926, Sokoto, Nigeria-d. Oct. 29, 2006, near Abuja, ... [1 Related Articles]
Macclesfield
(from the article "Macclesfield") town and borough (district), administrative and historic county of Cheshire, England. The borough includes a ...
Macclesfield
town and borough (district), administrative and historic county of Cheshire, England. The borough includes a ...
MacColl, Ewan
British singer, songwriter, and playwright.
MacColl, Kirsty
British singer and songwriter (b. Oct. 10, 1959, Croydon, Surrey, Eng.-d. Dec. 18, 2000, Cozumel, ...
MacCorquodale, Kenneth
(from the article "learning theory") An attractive possibility is that intervening variables may have discoverable physiological bases. Psychologists Paul E. ...
MacCready, Paul Beattie
American aerodynamicist who headed a team that designed and built both the first man-powered aircraft ... [2 Related Articles]
MacDiarmid, Alan G.
New Zealand-born American chemist who, with Alan J. Heeger and Shirakawa Hideki, was awarded the ... [1 Related Articles]
MacDiarmid, Hugh
preeminent Scottish poet of the first half of the 20th century and leader of the ... [2 Related Articles]
MacDonagh, Donagh
poet, playwright, and balladeer, prominent representative of lively Irish entertainment in the mid-20th century.
MacDonald, Alexander
(from the article "William III") ...without bloodshed, but in Scotland and Ireland there was armed resistance. This collapsed in Scotland ...
Macdonald, Alexander
(from the article "Celtic literature") ...poetry in Gaelic was printed before 1751, and most earlier verse was recovered from oral ...
Macdonald, Cynthia
American poet who employed a sardonic, often flippant tone and used grotesque imagery to comment ...
Macdonald, Flora
Scottish Jacobite heroine who helped Charles Edward, the Young Pretender, the Stuart claimant to the ...
Macdonald, Frances
(from the article "graphic design") ...form, and inspired in part by the theories and work of the American architect Frank ...
Macdonald, George
novelist of Scottish life, poet, and writer of Christian allegories of man's pilgrimage back to ...
Macdonald, Jacques, duc de Tarente
French general who was appointed marshal of the empire by Napoleon.
Macdonald, John
(from the article "Celtic literature") ...is fresh and natural. She inherited the imagery of the bardic poets but placed it ...
Macdonald, John
(from the article "Celtic literature") ...(Lachlann Mac Thearlaich Oig); John Mackay (Am Piobaire Dall), whose Coire an Easa ("The Waterfall ...
MacDonald, John D.
American fiction writer whose mystery and science-fiction works were published in more than 70 books. ...
Macdonald, John Sandfield
prime minister of the Province of Canada (1862-64) and first premier of Ontario (1867-71). [1 Related Articles]
Macdonald, Kenneth C.
(from the article "ocean") ...during the Challenger Expedition of the 1870s. It was described in its gross form during ...
Macdonald, Margaret
(from the article "graphic design") ...issues of form, and inspired in part by the theories and work of the American ...
MacDonald, Ramsay
first Labour Party prime minister of Great Britain, in the Labour governments of 1924 and ... [9 Related Articles]
Macdonald, Ross
American mystery writer who is credited with elevating the detective novel to the level of ...
Macdonald, Sir Hector
British soldier who won the rare distinction of rising from the ranks to major general. ...
Macdonald, Sir James Ronald Leslie
British soldier, engineer, and explorer who carried out a geographical exploration of British East Africa ...
Macdonald, Sir John
the first prime minister of the Dominion of Canada (1867-73, 1878-91), who led Canada through ... [11 Related Articles]
Macdonald-Wright, Stanton
painter and teacher who, with Morgan Russell, founded the movement known as Synchromism about 1912. ... [2 Related Articles]
MacDonnell Ranges
mountain system in south central Northern Territory, Australia, a series of bare quartzite and sandstone ...
MacDonnell, Sir Richard Graves
(from the article "Gairdner, Lake") ...simultaneously by Stephen Hack and Peter E. Warburton, it is named after Gordon Gairdner, former ...
MacDonnell, Sorley Boy
Irish Somhairle Buidhe MacDonnell Scots-Irish chieftain of Ulster, foe and captive of the celebrated Shane ... [1 Related Articles]
Macdonough, Thomas
U.S. naval officer who won one of the most important victories in the War of ... [1 Related Articles]
MacDowell Colony
retreat for artists, the oldest and among the largest artist colonies in the United States. ... [2 Related Articles]
MacDowell, Edward (Alexander)
U.S. composer known especially for his piano pieces in smaller forms. As one of the ... [2 Related Articles]
MacDowell, Marian Nevins
(from the article "MacDowell Colony") retreat for artists, the oldest and among the largest artist colonies in the United States. ...
Macduff
(from the article "Macbeth") ...wife realize that the moment has arrived for them to carry out a plan of ...
mace
spice consisting of the dried aril, or lacy covering, of the nutmeg fruit of Myristica ... [3 Related Articles]
mace
(from the article "military technology") ...tools-the spear-thrower (atlatl), the simple bow, the javelin, and the sling-had serious military potential, but ...
Mace, James
professional boxer and English heavyweight champion who is considered by some authorities to have been ... [1 Related Articles]
Macedo, Jose Agostinho de
Portuguese didactic poet, critic, and pamphleteer notable for his acerbity. [1 Related Articles]
Macedonia
country of the southern Balkans. It is bordered to the north by Kosovo and Serbia, ... [32 Related Articles]
Macedonia
ancient kingdom centred on the plain in the northeastern corner of the Greek peninsula, at ... [22 Related Articles]
Macedonia
, traditional region of Greece, comprising the northern and northeastern portions of that country. Greek ... [1 Related Articles]
Macedonia
region in the south-central part of the Balkan Peninsula that comprises northern and northeastern Greece, ... [14 Related Articles]
Macedonia, flag of
national flag consisting of a red field with a golden central disk and golden rays ...
Macedonia, history of
(from the article "Macedonia") As described in this article's introduction, the name Macedonia is applied both to a region ...
Macedonian
(from the article "Bulgaria") ...largest minority, comprise about one-tenth of the citizenry and live in some regions of the ...
Macedonian language
South Slavic language that is most closely related to Bulgarian and is written in the ... [2 Related Articles]
Macedonian literature
literature written in the South Slavic Macedonian language. [5 Related Articles]
Macedonian Orthodox Church
(from the article "Macedonia") The dispute between the Macedonian and Serbian Orthodox churches continued as the Serbian Orthodox Church ...
Macedonian question
a dispute that occurred during the 19th and 20th centuries among the Balkan powers over ...
Macedonian Wars
(3rd and 2nd centuries BC), four conflicts between the ancient Roman Republic and the kingdom ... [12 Related Articles]
Macedonianism
a 4th-century Christian heresy that denied the full personality and divinity of the Holy Spirit. ... [1 Related Articles]
Macedonius
Greek bishop of Constantinople (Istanbul) and a leading moderate Arian theologian in the 4th-century Trinitarian ... [1 Related Articles]
Macedonius
(from the article "Aquileia") ...and east. After the condemnation in 554 by Pope Vigilius of the Three Chapters (heretical ...
macehual
(from the article "pre-Columbian civilizations") ...and the professional warriors. Society was divided into three well-defined castes. At the top were ...
Maceio
capital, Alagoas estado (state), northeastern Brazil. It is situated below low bluffs ... [1 Related Articles]
Macek, Vladimir
nationalist and leader of the Croatian Peasant Party who opposed Serbian domination of Yugoslavia. He ... [2 Related Articles]
macellum
(from the article "Western architecture") ...meat and vegetables. For the latter kind of commerce, however, structures architecturally distinct from the ...
Macenta
town, southeastern Guinea. It is located in the Guinea Highlands (at 2,033 feet [620 m]) ...
MacEntyre, Eduardo
(from the article "Latin American art") ...geometry to create illusionistic canvases in the 1960s that seem to billow and scintillate with ...
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