| 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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