- Andorra la Vella (national capital, Andorra)
Andorra la Vella, town, capital of the independent coprincipality of Andorra. It lies near the confluence of the Valira and the Valira del Norte rivers in the narrow Gran Valira valley, on the southern slopes of the Pyrenees. Andorra la Vella long remained relatively isolated from the outside
- Andorra, flag of
vertically striped blue-yellow-red national flag with a central coat of arms. It has a width-to-length ratio of approximately 2 to 3.An agreement in 1278 between the bishop of Urgel (now in Spain) and the count of Foix (now in France) gave them joint jurisdiction over this small community in the
- Andorra, University of (university, Andorra)
Andorra: Geography: The University of Andorra was established in 1997; it has faculties in nursing, computer studies, and virtual studies and continuing education. Virtually all Andorrans are literate.
- Andorra-la-Vieja (national capital, Andorra)
Andorra la Vella, town, capital of the independent coprincipality of Andorra. It lies near the confluence of the Valira and the Valira del Norte rivers in the narrow Gran Valira valley, on the southern slopes of the Pyrenees. Andorra la Vella long remained relatively isolated from the outside
- Andorran (people)
Pyrenees: People and economy: …variety of peoples, including the Andorrans, Catalans, Béarnais, and Basques. Each speaks its own dialect or language, and each desires to maintain and even augment its own autonomy while at the same time acknowledging a general unity among Pyrenean peoples. Of these groups, only the Andorrans have anything approaching a…
- Andorre
Andorra, small, landlocked, independent European coprincipality situated among the southern peaks of the Pyrenees Mountains and bounded by France to the north and east and by Spain to the south and west. It is one of the smallest states in Europe. The capital is Andorra la Vella. Andorra consists
- Andorre-la-Vieille (national capital, Andorra)
Andorra la Vella, town, capital of the independent coprincipality of Andorra. It lies near the confluence of the Valira and the Valira del Norte rivers in the narrow Gran Valira valley, on the southern slopes of the Pyrenees. Andorra la Vella long remained relatively isolated from the outside
- Andosol (FAO soil group)
Andosol, one of the 30 soil groups in the classification system of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). Andosols are highly porous, dark-coloured soils developed from parent material of volcanic origin, such as volcanic ash, tuff, and pumice. They are found from Iceland to Indonesia, but
- Andover (Massachusetts, United States)
Andover, town (township), Essex county, northeastern Massachusetts, U.S. It lies in the Merrimack River valley just south of Lawrence and 20 miles (32 km) north of Boston. Settled in 1642, it was incorporated in 1646 and named for Andover, England, home of many of the early colonists. Textile mills
- Andover (England, United Kingdom)
Andover, market town, Test Valley district, administrative and historic county of Hampshire, England. It lies among chalk hills on the River Anton, a tributary of the Test, about 14 miles (22 km) northwest of Winchester and about 17 miles (27 km) northeast of Salisbury. The area is rich in
- Andover Academy (school, Andover, Massachusetts, United States)
Phillips Academy, private, coeducational college-preparatory school (grades 9–12) in Andover, Massachusetts, U.S. Features of its 500-acre (200-hectare) campus include a wildlife sanctuary, the Addison Gallery of American Art, and the Robert S. Peabody Institute of Archaeology. It was founded as a
- Andoyer, Dom (writer)
Old Roman chant: Dom Andoyer held an opposite view, however, writing (in 1912) that they were actually older than Gregorian and were simply preserved in the Old Roman tradition. The question was again raised in 1950 by Bruno Stäblein, a German musicologist, who held that the Old Roman…
- Andra Avenyn (Swedish television series)
Alicia Vikander: …drama Second Avenue (original title Andra Avenyn), in which she appeared (2007–08) as Jossan Tegebrandt Björn. Her feature film debut in Till det som är vackert (2009; Pure) resulted in a Guldbagge Award for best actress.
- Andrada e Silva, José Bonifácio de (Brazilian statesman)
José Bonifácio de Andrada e Silva was a Brazilian statesman who played a key role in Brazil’s attainment of independence from Portugal. He is known to Brazilians as the “Patriarch of Independence.” Andrada went to Portugal as a student and became a distinguished scholar there, earning an
- Andrade Franco, Aluísio Jorge (Brazilian playwright)
Jorge Andrade was one of the most powerful playwrights within the wave of theatrical renewal that began in Brazil just after 1950. After staging O faqueiro de prata (“The Silver Cutlery”) and O telescópio (“The Telescope”) in 1954, Andrade came even more forcefully to public attention in 1955 with
- Andrade, Carlos Drummond de (Brazilian poet and journalist)
Carlos Drummond de Andrade was a poet, journalist, author of crônicas (a short fiction–essay genre widely cultivated in Brazil), and literary critic. He is considered one of the most accomplished poets of modern Brazil and a major influence on mid-20th-century Brazilian poetry. His experiments with
- Andrade, Eugénio de (Portuguese poet)
Eugénio de Andrade was a Portuguese poet who, influenced by Surrealism, used concrete images that include earth, water, and the human body to explore such themes as love, nature, and death. His work is widely translated. Andrade, who began publishing poetry as a teenager, worked as a civil servant
- Andrade, Jorge (Brazilian playwright)
Jorge Andrade was one of the most powerful playwrights within the wave of theatrical renewal that began in Brazil just after 1950. After staging O faqueiro de prata (“The Silver Cutlery”) and O telescópio (“The Telescope”) in 1954, Andrade came even more forcefully to public attention in 1955 with
- Andrade, Mário Coelho Pinto de (Angolan writer)
Mário Pinto de Andrade was an Angolan writer and nationalist leader. While studying classical philology at the University of Lisbon, Andrade, with Agostinho Neto and Amilcar Cabral, formed the Centre for African Studies. He then attended the Sorbonne in Paris, wrote anticolonialist poetry, and was
- Andrade, Mário de (Brazilian writer)
Mário de Andrade was a writer whose chief importance was his introduction of a highly individual prose style that attempted to reflect colloquial Brazilian speech rather than “correct” Portuguese. He was also important in Brazil’s Modernist movement. Educated at the conservatory in São Paulo,
- Andrade, Mário Pinto de (Angolan writer)
Mário Pinto de Andrade was an Angolan writer and nationalist leader. While studying classical philology at the University of Lisbon, Andrade, with Agostinho Neto and Amilcar Cabral, formed the Centre for African Studies. He then attended the Sorbonne in Paris, wrote anticolonialist poetry, and was
- Andrade, Oswald de (Brazilian author)
Oswald de Andrade was a poet, playwright, and novelist, social agitator and revolutionary, one of the leaders of Brazil’s Modernist movement in the arts. Born into a wealthy and aristocratic family, Andrade traveled extensively in Europe during his youth and there became aware of avant-garde
- andradite (gemstone)
andradite, calcium-iron garnet, perhaps the most spectacular garnet because of its high dispersion (separation of light into colours), even greater than that of diamond, and refractive index. It is found in various colours, some of the most beautiful being yellowish (termed topazolite, because of
- Andragoras (Seleucid satrap of Parthia)
Andragoras was a Seleucid satrap (governor) of Parthia during the mid-3rd century. He apparently defied Seleucid imperial authority, which was weakly established in his area, and issued coins on which his image bore the royal diadem. After ruling only a few years, he was defeated and killed by
- Andramananety (king of Madagascar)
Menabé: Under his son Andramananety, the kingdom became known as Menabé, to distinguish it from a second Sakalava kingdom—Boina—founded by Adramananety’s brother farther north.
- Andrássy, Gyula, Count (prime minister of Hungary)
Gyula, Count Andrássy was a Hungarian prime minister and Austro-Hungarian foreign minister (1871–79), who helped create the Austro-Hungarian dualist form of government. As a firm supporter of Germany, he created, with the imperial German chancellor Otto von Bismarck, the Austro-German alliance of
- André 3000 (American rapper)
Lil Wayne: …Legend, Busta Rhymes, and OutKast’s Andre 3000. I Am Not a Human Being II followed in 2013. By then, some critics had begun to suspect that Lil Wayne’s creative peak was behind him, although he remained a vital commercial force.
- André Le Chapelain (French author)
André Le Chapelain was a French writer on the art of courtly love, best known for his three-volume treatise Liber de arte honeste amandi et reprobatione inhonesti amoris (c. 1185; “Book of the Art of Loving Nobly and the Reprobation of Dishonourable Love”). He is thought to have been a chaplain at
- Andre the Giant (French professional wrestler and actor)
Shepard Fairey: …of André René Roussimoff, captioned Andre the Giant Has a Posse. He gained national attention and sold more than one million copies of another sticker with a refined version of the portrait and the single word Obey. A documentary short, André the Giant Has a Posse (1997; directed by Helen…
- Andre, Carl (American sculptor)
Carl Andre was an American sculptor associated with Minimalism. Andre is known for abstract work made of repetitive blocks, bricks, and metal plates arranged directly on the floor. Like other Minimalists of his generation, Andre constructed his works out of industrial materials that called
- André, John (British military officer)
John André was a British army officer who negotiated with the American general Benedict Arnold and was executed as a spy during the American Revolution (1775–83). Sent to America in 1774, André became chief intelligence officer to the British commander in chief, General Sir Henry Clinton, in New
- André, Maurice (French trumpeter)
Maurice André was a French trumpeter who was known for his superlative musicianship, dazzling quickness, and clear tones, notably on a specially made trumpet (with four valves) in the higher register, and for establishing both the solo trumpet and the piccolo trumpet as concerto instruments. In his
- André-Deshays, Claudie (French cosmonaut, doctor, and politician)
Claudie Haigneré is a French cosmonaut, doctor, and politician who was the first French woman in space (1996). Haigneré graduated as a rheumatologist from Faculté de Médecine and Faculté des Sciences in Paris and completed a doctorate in neurosciences in 1992. From 1984 to 1992 she worked at the
- Andrea (novel by Laforet)
Carmen Laforet: Nada, Laforet’s first and most successful novel, presents the impressions of a young girl who returns to Barcelona from abroad after the war and discovers a sordid, chaotic atmosphere and intellectual emptiness. It is written in the postwar narrative style known as tremendismo, which is…
- Andrea Chénier (opera by Giordano)
Umberto Giordano: …style, known for his opera Andrea Chénier.
- Andrea d’Agnolo (Italian painter)
Andrea del Sarto was an Italian painter and draftsman whose works of exquisite composition and craftsmanship were instrumental in the development of Florentine Mannerism. His most striking among other well-known works is the series of frescoes on the life of St. John the Baptist in the Chiostro
- Andrea da Barberino (Italian author and singer)
Andrea da Barberino was a ballad singer, prose writer, and compiler of epic tales. The material for Andrea’s prose compilation of Charlemagne legends, I reali di Francia (1491; “The Royalty of France,” modern edition by G. Vandelli, 1892–1900), was drawn for the most part from earlier Italian
- Andrea da Firenze (Italian painter)
Andrea da Firenze was a Florentine fresco painter whose considerable ability is demonstrated by his works in the church of Sta. Maria Novella in Florence. Andrea’s name appears in the register of the Arte dei Medici e degli Speziali guild in Florence. At the end of 1365 he was commissioned to
- Andrea da Pontedera (Italian sculptor)
Andrea Pisano was one of the most important Italian sculptors of the 14th century whose chief works were executed in Florence, where he came under the influence of Giotto. Andrea is recorded as the author of the earliest of three bronze doors for the baptistery of the cathedral of Florence, which,
- Andrea de’ Mangiabotti (Italian author and singer)
Andrea da Barberino was a ballad singer, prose writer, and compiler of epic tales. The material for Andrea’s prose compilation of Charlemagne legends, I reali di Francia (1491; “The Royalty of France,” modern edition by G. Vandelli, 1892–1900), was drawn for the most part from earlier Italian
- Andrea del Sarto (Italian painter)
Andrea del Sarto was an Italian painter and draftsman whose works of exquisite composition and craftsmanship were instrumental in the development of Florentine Mannerism. His most striking among other well-known works is the series of frescoes on the life of St. John the Baptist in the Chiostro
- Andrea di Bartolo di Simone (Italian painter)
Andrea del Castagno was one of the most influential 15th-century Italian Renaissance painters, best known for the emotional power and naturalistic treatment of figures in his work. Little is known of Castagno’s early life, and it is also difficult to ascertain the stages of his artistic development
- Andrea di Cione (Italian painter)
Andrea Orcagna was the most prominent Florentine painter, sculptor, and architect of the mid-14th century. The son of a goldsmith, Orcagna was the leading member of a family of painters, which included three younger brothers: Nardo (died 1365/66), Matteo, and Jacopo (died after 1398) di Cione. He
- Andrea Doria (Italian ship)
Andrea Doria, Italian passenger liner that sank on July 25–26, 1956, after colliding with the Stockholm off the coast of Nantucket in the Atlantic Ocean. The maritime disaster resulted in the deaths of 51 people—46 from the Andrea Doria and 5 from the Stockholm. The SS Andrea Doria was a flagship
- Andrea’s Fountain (sculpture by Asawa)
Ruth Asawa: Her first public sculpture, titled Andrea, was installed in Ghirardelli Square in 1968. Though some of her designs in that period dismayed admirers of her earlier, abstract creations, her sculptures were so popular in San Francisco that residents dubbed her the “fountain lady.” In 2010 the public arts high school…
- Andreä, Jakob (German theologian)
Martin Chemnitz: …of work with the theologian Jakob Andreä in uniting German Lutheranism, which had been divided by theological disagreement after Luther’s death in 1546. This end was achieved by the Formula of Concord (1577), which inaugurated the era of Lutheran orthodoxy and was primarily the work of the two men.
- Andreae, Johann Valentin (Lutheran theologian)
Rosicrucian: …that have been attributed to Johann Valentin Andreae (1568–1654), a Lutheran theologian and teacher who wrote the utopian treatise Christianopolis (1619). The Fama Fraternitatis of the Meritorious Order of the Rosy Cross (1614), The Confession of the Rosicrucian Fraternity (1615), and The Chymical Marriage of Christian Rosenkreuz (1616) recount the…
- Andreaea (plant genus)
bryophyte: Annotated classification: …1 genus in each order, Andreaea, Andreaeobryum, and Takakia, and probably fewer than 100 species in the entire subclass. Until recently, the genus Takakia (2 species) was considered a liverwort rather than a moss, and its classification remains less than perfectly understood. Subclass Sphagnidae
- Andreaeales (plant)
granite moss, any of the plants of the order Andreaeales of the subclass Andreaeidae, comprising a single family, Andreaeaceae, which includes the genus Andreaea, with fewer than 100 species, including A. fuegiana, which formerly made up the separate genus of Neuroloma. The reddish brown or
- Andreaeidae (plant)
bryophyte: Annotated classification: Subclass Andreaeidae Sporophytes usually lacking a seta; sporangium opening by longitudinal lines; sporangium with spore-bearing layer overarching and encircling the central columella; gametophore irregularly branched, dark-pigmented, with spirally arranged leaves, attached to the substratum by rhizoids; leaves with or without midrib; paraphyses few or absent; sporophytes…
- Andreaeobryum (plant genus)
bryophyte: Annotated classification: …genus in each order, Andreaea, Andreaeobryum, and Takakia, and probably fewer than 100 species in the entire subclass. Until recently, the genus Takakia (2 species) was considered a liverwort rather than a moss, and its classification remains less than perfectly understood. Subclass Sphagnidae Sporophytes lacking a seta; subspherical sporangium
- Andreani, Andrea (Italian printmaker)
Andrea Andreani was an Italian printmaker known especially for his chiaroscuro printing, a technique developed in the early 16th century to facilitate shading. In this technique, several woodblocks are used for the same print, each block engraved to produce a different tone of the same colour.
- Andreanof Islands (islands, Alaska, United States)
Andreanof Islands, one of several smaller groups of islands within the Aleutian Islands, southwestern Alaska, U.S. They lie between the Pacific Ocean (south) and the Bering Sea (north) and extend east-west for about 270 miles (430 km) east of Rat Islands. The largest islands in the group are Adak,
- Andreas (Old English poem)
English literature: Religious verse: Guthlac and Andreas; the latter, the apocryphal story of how St. Andrew fell into the hands of the cannibalistic (and presumably mythical) Mermedonians, has stylistic affinities with Beowulf. Also in the “Cynewulf group” are several poems with Christ as their subject, of which the most important is…
- Andreas-Salomé, Lou (German writer)
Lou Andreas-Salomé was a Russian-German writer remembered for her friendships with the great men of her day. Salomé was the daughter of a Russian army officer of French Huguenot descent. She studied theology at the University of Zürich. In 1882 the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche fell in
- Andreessen, Marc (American software engineer)
Marc Andreessen is an American-born software engineer who played a key role in creating the Web browser Mosaic and who cofounded Netscape Communications Corporation. While still in grammar school, Andreessen taught himself BASIC, a programming language, so that he could write his own computer
- Andreev, Leonid Nikolayevich (Russian author)
Leonid Andreyev was a novelist whose best work has a place in Russian literature for its evocation of a mood of despair and absolute pessimism. At the age of 20 Andreyev entered St. Petersburg University but lived restlessly for some time. In 1894, after several attempts at suicide, he transferred
- Andrei Alexandrovich, prince of Russia (Russian prince)
Andrei Alexandrovich, prince of Russia , was the grandson of Tsar Alexander III of Russia who narrowly escaped death after the Russian Revolution and was freed by German troops shortly before the World War I armistice. The prince fled to Paris with his father, Grand Duke Alexander Mikhaylovich, and
- Andreini, Francesco (Italian actor)
Francesco Andreini was an Italian actor of commedia dell’arte who, with his wife, Isabella Andreini, was a founder and star performer of the Compagnia dei Gelosi, one of the earliest and most famous of commedia dell’arte troupes. Andreini began his career as a soldier but was captured by the Turks
- Andreini, Giovambattista (Italian actor and author)
Giovambattista Andreini was an actor of commedia dell’arte and son of Francesco and Isabella Andreini. Giovambattista was also the author of the play Adamo (“Adam”), which, it has been claimed, suggested the idea of Paradise Lost to John Milton. Andreini began his stage career with the Compagnia
- Andreini, Isabella (Italian actress and author)
Isabella Andreini was the Italian leading lady of the Compagnia dei Gelosi, the most famous of the early commedia dell’arte companies. In 1576 Flaminio Scala, a theatrical manager and scenario writer, engaged Isabella Canali to play the female lead in his company. There she met Francesco Andreini,
- Andreis, Andrew James Felix Bartholomew de (American priest)
Felix de Andreis was a Vincentian priest and pioneer missionary to the American West. Ordained at Piacenza (Italy) in 1802, Andreis was transferred (1806) to Rome, where he served as preacher, professor of theology, and apostle to the poor. While on a visit to Rome in 1815, William Du Bourg, the
- Andreis, Felix de (American priest)
Felix de Andreis was a Vincentian priest and pioneer missionary to the American West. Ordained at Piacenza (Italy) in 1802, Andreis was transferred (1806) to Rome, where he served as preacher, professor of theology, and apostle to the poor. While on a visit to Rome in 1815, William Du Bourg, the
- Andrena (bee genus)
mining bee: (order Hymenoptera), particularly the genus Andrena. Many species are medium-sized bees with reddish-golden hair and long, prominent abdomens. Females excavate tunnels in the soil that branch off to individual cells that the female stocks with pollen balls and nectar, on which she lays her eggs. There may be one or…
- Andrenidae (insect family)
mining bee, (family Andrenidae), any of a group of bees (order Hymenoptera), particularly the genus Andrena. Many species are medium-sized bees with reddish-golden hair and long, prominent abdomens. Females excavate tunnels in the soil that branch off to individual cells that the female stocks with
- Andreotti, Giulio (prime minister of Italy)
Giulio Andreotti was an Italian politician who was one of the country’s most skillful and powerful politicians in the era after World War II. Over a 20-year period, he was a leading figure in the Christian Democratic Party (DC) and served as prime minister of Italy several times (1972–73, 1976–79,
- Andres Bonifacio, Fort (fort, Makati, Philippines)
Makati: Fort Andres Bonifacio (formerly Fort William McKinley) is the site of the Manila American Cemetery and Memorial, the largest cemetery maintained by the American Battle Monuments Program. Pop. (2007) 510,383; (2010) 529,039.
- Andrés Puerta, José Ramón (Spanish chef, restaurateur, author, and humanitarian)
José Andrés (born July 13, 1969, Mieres, Spain) is a highly decorated Spanish chef, restaurateur, author, and humanitarian. He initially gained fame for popularizing the tapas style of dining; but Andrés’s later charity work through World Central Kitchen (WCK) put him in the middle of wars, natural
- Andrés, José (Spanish chef, restaurateur, author, and humanitarian)
José Andrés (born July 13, 1969, Mieres, Spain) is a highly decorated Spanish chef, restaurateur, author, and humanitarian. He initially gained fame for popularizing the tapas style of dining; but Andrés’s later charity work through World Central Kitchen (WCK) put him in the middle of wars, natural
- Andress, Ursula (Swiss-American actress)
Casino Royale: …of agent Vesper Lynd (Ursula Andress) to seduce Evelyn Tremble (Peter Sellers), the world’s greatest baccarat player. Tremble agrees to pose as James Bond and challenge Le Chiffre to a high-stakes game at the famed Casino Royale, which is a front for SMERSH operations. Tremble wins the game, causing…
- Andretti, Aldo (American race–car driver)
Mario Andretti: Mario and his twin brother, Aldo, studied automobile mechanics, frequented racing-car garages, and participated in a race-driving training program in Italy. In 1955 the family came to the United States and settled in Nazareth, Pennsylvania; Mario became a U.S. citizen in 1964. By 1958 the brothers were racing stock cars.…
- Andretti, Mario (American race–car driver)
Mario Andretti is an Italian-born American automobile-racing driver who drove stock cars, U.S. championship cars, and Formula One cars. Mario and his twin brother, Aldo, studied automobile mechanics, frequented racing-car garages, and participated in a race-driving training program in Italy. In
- Andretti, Mario Gabriel (American race–car driver)
Mario Andretti is an Italian-born American automobile-racing driver who drove stock cars, U.S. championship cars, and Formula One cars. Mario and his twin brother, Aldo, studied automobile mechanics, frequented racing-car garages, and participated in a race-driving training program in Italy. In
- Andreu Almazán, Juan (Mexican politician)
Mexico: Resurgence under Cárdenas: …whom Cárdenas supported, and General Juan Andreu Almazán fought a close and bitter contest for the presidency in 1940. When Almazán lost, he sought U.S. support for a revolution. But to emphasize the U.S. position toward Ávila Camacho and Mexico, Roosevelt sent Vice President Henry A. Wallace to attend the…
- Andreus, Antonius (13th-century theologian)
Blessed John Duns Scotus: Years at the University of Paris of Blessed John Duns Scotus: Antonius Andreus, an early follower who studied under Duns Scotus at Paris, expressly says his own commentaries on Porphyry and De praedicamentis are culled from statements of Duns Scotus sedentis super cathedram magistralem (“sitting on the master’s chair”).
- Andrew Albert Christian Edward, duke of York, earl of Inverness, and Baron Killyleagh (British prince)
Prince Andrew, duke of York , duke of York, is the third child of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, duke of Edinburgh, and the younger brother of Charles III. Andrew was the first child born to a reigning British monarch (male or female) since 1857. For the first 22 years of his life, until the
- Andrew Alexandrovich of Russia, Prince (Russian prince)
Andrei Alexandrovich, prince of Russia , was the grandson of Tsar Alexander III of Russia who narrowly escaped death after the Russian Revolution and was freed by German troops shortly before the World War I armistice. The prince fled to Paris with his father, Grand Duke Alexander Mikhaylovich, and
- Andrew Charlton and Arne Borg: The Boy and the Sturgeon
The swimming events at the 1928 Olympic Games in Amsterdam featured a rivalry between two of the greatest swimmers of that era: Andrew (“Boy”) Charlton of Australia and Arne Borg (“The Swedish Sturgeon”). Both swimmers had colourful personalities and were popular athletes in their respective
- Andrew Doria (ship)
Sint Eustatius: …a salute to the brig Andrew Doria, which was flying the new Stars and Stripes flag. Great Britain took umbrage at the incident and lodged a complaint with The Hague in early 1777; Sint Eustatius was considered to be speaking for the Netherlands in the matter. The incident continued to…
- Andrew I (Russian prince)
Andrew I was a prince of Rostov-Suzdal (1157) and grand prince of Vladimir (1169), who increased the importance of the northeastern Russian lands and contributed to the development of government in that forest region. Having accompanied his father, Yury Dolgoruky, on his conquest of Kiev, Andrew
- Andrew I (king of Hungary)
Hungary: The early kings: …followed on the throne by Andrew (Endre) I, of a collateral branch of the house of Árpád, who was killed in 1060 while fleeing from a battle lost to his brother, Béla I. After Béla’s death there was a further conflict between his sons, Géza and Ladislas (László), and Andrew’s…
- Andrew II (king of Hungary)
Andrew II was the king of Hungary (1205–35) whose reign was marked by controversy with barons and the great feudatories and by the issuance of the Golden Bull of 1222 (q.v.), which has been called the Hungarian Magna Carta. The son of Béla III, Andrew succeeded László III, his elder brother’s son,
- Andrew III (king of Hungary)
Hungary: The Mongol invasion: the last Árpád kings: A male heir, Andrew III, was found in Italy, and, although the young man’s claim to the throne was impugned, he proved a wise, capable king. With his death in 1301, however, the national dynasty became extinct.
- Andrew Of Caesarea (bishop and author)
Andrew Of Caesarea was a bishop of Caesarea, and the author of possibly the most significant Greek commentary on the book of Revelation (Apocalypse) from the era of the Church Fathers. His annotations seem to have influenced the Greek version of that biblical text. Andrew’s exposition of the book
- Andrew Of Carniola (archbishop of Carniola)
Andrew Of Carniola was an archbishop, advocate of conciliar rule in the Western church—i.e., the supremacy of a general council of bishops over the papacy. Because of his personal animosity and eccentric conduct toward Pope Sixtus IV, church historians generally do not consider Andrew a precursor
- Andrew of Crete, Saint (archbishop of Gortyna, Crete)
Saint Andrew of Crete ; feast day July 4) was the archbishop of Gortyna, Crete, regarded by the Greek Church as one of its greatest hymn writers. From his monastery in Jerusalem he was sent to Constantinople (modern Istanbul), where he became deacon of the Hagia Sophia. During the reign of the
- Andrew of Hungary (Hungarian prince)
Joan I: …her marriage to her cousin Andrew, brother of Louis I of Hungary (1342–82); her accession was intended to reconcile the Hungarian and Angevin claims on Naples. The swarm of Hungarians who followed Andrew to Naples, however, antagonized many of the Angevins at court, including Joan herself. Consequently, when Andrew was…
- Andrew of Kraina (archbishop of Carniola)
Andrew Of Carniola was an archbishop, advocate of conciliar rule in the Western church—i.e., the supremacy of a general council of bishops over the papacy. Because of his personal animosity and eccentric conduct toward Pope Sixtus IV, church historians generally do not consider Andrew a precursor
- Andrew Of Lonjumel (French diplomat)
Andrew Of Lonjumel was a French Dominican friar who, as an ambassador of Louis IX (St. Louis) of France, led a diplomatic mission destined for the court of the Mongol khan Güyük. His report of the journey across Central Asia and back (1249 to 1251/52), though a mixture of fact and fiction, contains
- Andrew’s Loose Tooth (story by Munsch)
Robert Munsch: …books included Alligator Baby (1997), Andrew’s Loose Tooth (1998), Ribbon Rescue (1999), Smelly Socks (2004), Moose! (2011), and The Enormous Suitcase (2017). He was awarded the Order of Canada in 1999.
- Andrew, Hurricane (storm [1992])
Hurricane Andrew, tropical cyclone that ravaged The Bahamas, southern Florida, and south-central Louisiana in late August 1992. At the time, Hurricane Andrew was the most expensive Atlantic hurricane in U.S. history (later surpassed by Hurricane Katrina in 2005). Hurricane Andrew began as a
- Andrew, John Albion (governor of Massachusetts)
John Albion Andrew was a U.S. antislavery leader who, as governor of Massachusetts during the Civil War, was one of the most energetic of the Northern “war governors.” Andrew entered political life as a Whig opposed to the Mexican War (1846–48). In 1848 he joined the Free-Soil movement against the
- Andrew, St. (Christian Apostle)
St. Andrew ; feast day November 30) was one of the Twelve Apostles of Jesus and the brother of St. Peter. He is the patron saint of Scotland and of Russia. In the Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark, and Luke), Peter and Andrew—whose Greek name means “manly”—were called from their fishing by Jesus to
- Andrewes, Christopher H. (British scientist)
virus: …the British investigators Wilson Smith, Christopher H. Andrewes, and Patrick P. Laidlaw were able to transmit influenza to ferrets, and the influenza virus was subsequently adapted to mice. In 1941 the American scientist George K. Hirst found that influenza virus grown in tissues of the chicken embryo could be detected…
- Andrewes, Lancelot (English theologian)
Lancelot Andrewes was a theologian and court preacher who sought to defend and advance Anglican doctrines during a period of great strife in the English church. Andrewes was elected a fellow of Pembroke College, Cambridge, in 1575 and was ordained a deacon in 1580. His service to several parishes
- Andrews Sisters, the (American singing group)
the Andrews Sisters, singing trio, one of the most popular American musical acts of the 1940s. The group’s renditions of swing tunes in close harmony sold millions of copies; the act was also hugely popular in live performance and in film. The sisters were LaVerne Sofia Andrews (b. July 6, 1911,
- Andrews University (university, Berrien Springs, Michigan, United States)
Ellen Gould Harmon White: …Emmanuel Missionary College (from 1960 Andrews University), and in 1903 the church headquarters and newspaper relocated to Takoma Park, Maryland. From that year White lived mainly in St. Helena, California.
- Andrews, Augustus George (British actor)
George Arliss was an actor noted for his portrayal of historic personages in many motion pictures. Arliss began his acting career in 1887 but did not have his first substantial success until he appeared with Mrs. Patrick Campbell in London during the 1900–01 season. In 1902 he played in The Second
- Andrews, Carver Dana (American actor)
Dana Andrews was an American actor, a handsome leading man who appeared in such films of the 1940s as The Ox-Bow Incident (1943), Laura (1944), A Walk in the Sun (1945), and The Best Years of Our Lives (1946). A onetime accountant, Andrews in 1931 hitchhiked to Los Angeles, where he worked at
- Andrews, Charles Freer (English missionary)
Charles Freer Andrews was an English missionary whose experiences in India led him to advocate for Indian independence and for the rights of Indian labourers around the world. Andrews was the son of a minister in the Catholic Apostolic (Irvingite) Church, but he converted to the Church of England