- Aurelius Clemens Prudentius (Christian poet)
Prudentius was a Christian Latin poet whose Psychomachia (“The Contest of the Soul”), the first completely allegorical poem in European literature, was immensely influential in the Middle Ages. Prudentius practiced law, held two provincial governorships, and was awarded a high position by the Roman
- Aurelius of Carthage (Christian bishop)
St. Augustine: Life overview: …in the official church, Bishop Aurelius of Carthage, fought a canny and relentless campaign against it with their books, with their recruitment of support among church leaders, and with careful appeal to Roman officialdom. In 411 the reigning emperor sent an official representative to Carthage to settle the quarrel. A…
- Aurelius Victor, Sextus (Roman historian and governor)
ancient Rome: The remnants of pagan culture: The works of Sextus Aurelius Victor and Eutropius, who ably abridged earlier historical works, are fairly accurate and more reliable than the Scriptores historiae Augustae, a collection of imperial biographies of unequal value, undoubtedly composed under Theodosius but for an unknown purpose. Erudition was greatly prized in aristocratic…
- Aurelius’ Column (ancient structure, Rome, Italy)
ancient Rome: Rome and Italy: …Temple of Antoninus and Faustina, Aurelius’ Column, as well as the aqueducts whose arches spanned across Campagna to keep the city and its innumerable fountains supplied with water.
- Aurelius, Marcus (emperor of Rome)
Marcus Aurelius was a Roman emperor (161–180), best known for his Meditations on Stoic philosophy. Marcus Aurelius has symbolized for many generations in the West the Golden Age of the Roman Empire. When he was born, his paternal grandfather was already consul for the second time and prefect of
- Aurene glass (glassware)
Steuben Glass Company: …an iridescent, translucent finish called Aurene. Another specialty was Intarsia glass, crystal glassware with soft, overlapping colour inlays. In the 1930s the firm began making glassware from a new colourless lead crystal developed by Corning. Steuben later manufactured fine glass products of cut, engraved, and free-blown designs made almost exclusively…
- Aureng-Zebe (play by Dryden)
John Dryden: Writing for the stage: …intelligent example of the genre, Aureng-Zebe. In this play he abandoned the use of rhymed couplets for that of blank verse.
- Aureol, Peter (French philosopher)
Petrus Aureoli was a French churchman, philosopher, and critical thinker, called Doctor facundus (“eloquent teacher”), who was important as a forerunner to William of Ockham. Petrus may have become a Franciscan at Gourdon before 1300; he was in Paris (1304) to study, possibly under John Duns
- aureole (atmospheric science)
aureole, brightly illuminated area surrounding an atmospheric light source, such as the Sun, when the light is propagated through a medium containing many sizes of particles or droplets that are large compared to the wavelength of the light. Because the wavelength of visible light is about 0.00005
- Aureolus (Roman general)
ancient Rome: Succession of emperors and usurpers: …in Milan besieging the usurper Aureolus, he was killed by his chiefs of staff, who proclaimed Claudius II (268), the first of the Illyrian emperors. The new emperor won a great victory against the Alemanni on the Garda lake and overwhelmed the Goths in Naissus (269) but died of the…
- Aurès (mountains, Algeria)
Aurès, mountains, part of the Saharan Atlas in northeastern Algeria, northern Africa, fronted by rugged cliffs in the north and opening out in the south into the two parallel fertile valleys of the wadies Abiod and ʿAbdi, facing the Sahara. The highest peaks, which are snowcapped during winter,
- aureus (ancient Roman money)
aureus, basic gold monetary unit of ancient Rome and the Roman world. It was first named nummus aureus (“gold money”), or denarius aureus, and was equal to 25 silver denarii; a denarius equaled 10 bronze asses. (In 89 bc, the sestertius, equal to one-quarter of a denarius, replaced the bronze ass
- Aurgelmir (Norse mythology)
Aurgelmir, in Norse mythology, the first being, a giant who was created from the drops of water that formed when the ice of Niflheim met the heat of Muspelheim. Aurgelmir was the father of all the giants; a male and a female grew under his arm, and his legs produced a six-headed son. A cow,
- Auric, Georges (French composer)
Georges Auric was a French composer best known for his film scores and ballets. In these and other works, he was among those who reacted against the chromatic harmonic language and Symbolist structures of Claude Debussy. Auric studied under Vincent d’Indy and Albert Roussel in Paris, and in 1920
- aurichalcite (mineral)
aurichalcite, a mineral composed of the hydroxide carbonate of zinc and copper (Zn, Cu)5(OH)6(CO3)2. It is commonly found with malachite in the oxidized zone of zinc and copper deposits as at Tomsk, Siberia; Santander, Spain; and Bisbee, Ariz., U.S. Its pale blue-green featherlike form
- auricle (heart)
atrium: …an ear-shaped projection called an auricle. (The term auricle has also been applied, incorrectly, to the entire atrium.) The right atrium receives from the veins blood low in oxygen and high in carbon dioxide; this blood is transferred to the right lower chamber, or ventricle, and is pumped to the…
- auricle (ear)
auricle, in human anatomy, the visible portion of the external ear, and the point of difference between the human ear and that of other mammals. The auricle in humans is almost rudimentary and generally immobile and lies close to the side of the head. It is composed of a thin plate of yellow
- auricular style (decorative art)
auricular style, a 17th-century ornamental style based on parts of the human anatomy. It was invented in the early 17th century by Dutch silversmiths and brothers Paulus and Adam van Vianen. Paulus was inspired by anatomy lectures he attended in Prague, and both he and Adam became known for the
- Auricularia auricula-judae
Basidiomycota: The ear fungus (Auricularia auricula-judae) is a brown, gelatinous edible fungus found on dead tree trunks in moist weather in the autumn. One of 10 widespread Auricularia species, it is ear- or shell-shaped and sometimes acts as a parasite, especially on elder (Sambucus).
- Auriculariales (order of fungi)
fungus: Annotated classification: Order Auriculariales (incertae sedis; not placed in any subclass) Saprotrophic; basidia may be divided longitudinally; gelatinous fruiting body may appear to be upside-down and may fuse to form large masses; includes ear fungus and black jelly roll; example genera include Auricularia, Exidia, and Bourdotia. Order Cantharellales…
- auriculotemporal nerve (anatomy)
human nervous system: Mandibular nerve: …head above the ears (auriculotemporal nerve), (3) oral mucosa, the anterior two-thirds of the tongue, gingiva adjacent to the tongue, and the floor of the mouth (lingual nerve), and (4) the mandibular teeth (inferior alveolar nerve). Skin over the lateral and anterior surfaces of the mandible and the lower…
- Auriemma, Geno (American coach)
Geno Auriemma is an Italian-born American basketball coach who led the University of Connecticut women’s team to a record 11 National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) national championships between 1995 and 2016 and to an unprecedented six undefeated seasons. Auriemma’s family immigrated to
- Auriemma, Luigi (American coach)
Geno Auriemma is an Italian-born American basketball coach who led the University of Connecticut women’s team to a record 11 National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) national championships between 1995 and 2016 and to an unprecedented six undefeated seasons. Auriemma’s family immigrated to
- Aurier, Albert (French critic)
art criticism: The avant-garde problem: …of the great French critic Albert Aurier. He wrote the first article ever on van Gogh (1890)—a very positive and perceptive interpretation. In a still telling, definitive essay on Gauguin (1891), Aurier supported the artist’s Symbolism, simplicity, and “emotivity.” In a similar appreciative spirit, the French critic André Fontainas praised…
- Auriga (constellation)
Auriga, constellation in the northern sky, at about 6 hours right ascension and 45° north in declination. The brightest star in Auriga is Capella, the sixth brightest star in the sky. The constellation also contains the notable eclipsing binary Epsilon Aurigae. Auriga has been identified with
- Aurignacian culture (prehistoric technology and art)
Aurignacian culture, toolmaking industry and artistic tradition of Upper Paleolithic Europe that followed the Mousterian industry, was contemporary with the Perigordian, and was succeeded by the Solutrean. The Aurignacian culture was marked by a great diversification and specialization of tools,
- Aurigny (island, Channel Islands, English Channel)
Alderney, one of the Channel Islands, in the English Channel, separated from the Normandy coast (Cap de la Hague) by the dangerously swift 10-mile (16-km) Race of Alderney. Swinge Race, on the west, separates it from the uninhabited Burhou, Ortac, and smaller islets, beyond which the notorious
- Aurillac (France)
Aurillac, town, capital of Cantal département, Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes région, south-central France. It lies along the Jourdanne River at an elevation of 2,040 feet (622 metres) above sea level, southwest of Clermont-Ferrand. Gerbert, the first French pope (known as Sylvester II), was born in the town
- Aurinia saxatilis (plant)
basket-of-gold, (Aurinia saxatilis), ornamental perennial plant of the mustard family (Brassicaceae) with golden yellow clusters of tiny flowers and gray-green foliage. Basket-of-gold is native to sunny areas of central and southern Europe, usually growing in thin rocky soils. It forms a dense
- Aurinx (Spain)
Jaén, city, capital of Jaén provincia (province) in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Andalusia, southern Spain. It lies on the northern side of the Sierra Jabalecuz and north of Granada. Known to the Romans as Aurinx, the city was the centre of the Moorish principality of Jayyán and
- Auriol, Pierre (French philosopher)
Petrus Aureoli was a French churchman, philosopher, and critical thinker, called Doctor facundus (“eloquent teacher”), who was important as a forerunner to William of Ockham. Petrus may have become a Franciscan at Gourdon before 1300; he was in Paris (1304) to study, possibly under John Duns
- Auriol, Vincent (president of France)
Vincent Auriol was the first president of the Fourth French Republic, who presided over crisis-ridden coalition governments between 1947 and 1954. After studying law at the University of Toulouse, Auriol was elected to the French Chamber of Deputies in 1914; he soon emerged as a prominent figure in
- Auriparus flaviceps (bird)
verdin, North American songbird of the family Remizidae
- Aurness, James King (American actor)
Gunsmoke: …of Matt Dillon (played by James Arness), a U.S. marshal charged with maintaining law and order in an American frontier town. The supporting characters included Miss Kitty Russell (Amanda Blake), owner of the Long Branch Saloon, which doubled as a bordello; Doc Adams (Milburn Stone), the town’s adept physician; and…
- Aurobindo Ashram (religious site, Pondicherry, India)
Hinduism: Aurobindo Ashram: Another modern teacher whose doctrines had some influence outside India was Shri Aurobindo. He began his career as a revolutionary but later withdrew from politics and settled in Pondicherry, then a French possession. There he established an ashram and achieved a high reputation…
- Aurobindo, Shri (Indian philosopher and yogi)
Sri Aurobindo was a yogi, seer, philosopher, poet, and Indian nationalist who propounded a philosophy of divine life on earth through spiritual evolution. Aurobindo’s education began in a Christian convent school in Darjeeling (Darjiling). While still a boy, he was sent to England for further
- Aurobindo, Sri (Indian philosopher and yogi)
Sri Aurobindo was a yogi, seer, philosopher, poet, and Indian nationalist who propounded a philosophy of divine life on earth through spiritual evolution. Aurobindo’s education began in a Christian convent school in Darjeeling (Darjiling). While still a boy, he was sent to England for further
- auroch (extinct mammal)
aurochs, (Bos primigenius), extinct wild ox of Europe, family Bovidae (order Artiodactyla), from which cattle are probably descended. The aurochs survived in central Poland until 1627. The aurochs was black, stood 1.8 metres (6 feet) high at the shoulder, and had spreading, forward-curving horns.
- aurochs (extinct mammal)
aurochs, (Bos primigenius), extinct wild ox of Europe, family Bovidae (order Artiodactyla), from which cattle are probably descended. The aurochs survived in central Poland until 1627. The aurochs was black, stood 1.8 metres (6 feet) high at the shoulder, and had spreading, forward-curving horns.
- Aurora (Greek and Roman mythology)
Eos, in Greco-Roman mythology, the personification of the dawn. According to the Greek poet Hesiod’s Theogony, she was the daughter of the Titan Hyperion and the Titaness Theia and sister of Helios, the sun god, and Selene, the moon goddess. By the Titan Astraeus she was the mother of the winds
- Aurora (Texas, United States)
Port Arthur, city, Jefferson county, southeastern Texas, U.S., 90 miles (145 km) east of Houston. It is a major deepwater port on Sabine Lake and the Sabine-Neches and Gulf Intracoastal waterways, 9 miles (14 km) from the Gulf of Mexico. With Beaumont and Orange, it forms the “Golden Triangle,” an
- Aurora (Colorado, United States)
Aurora, city, Adams, Arapahoe, and Douglas counties, north-central Colorado, U.S. An eastern suburb of Denver, Aurora was the third most populous city in Colorado at the start of the 21st century. It was founded during the silver boom of 1891 and named Fletcher after its Canadian-born founder,
- Aurora (Illinois, United States)
Aurora, city, Kane and DuPage counties, northeastern Illinois, U.S. It lies on the Fox River, about 40 miles (65 km) west of Chicago. Founded in 1834 by settlers from New York, it was originally known as McCarty’s Mills. A trading point and mill site near a Potawatomi Indian village, the town was
- aurora (atmospheric phenomenon)
aurora, luminous phenomenon of Earth’s upper atmosphere that occurs primarily in high latitudes of both hemispheres; in the Northern Hemisphere auroras are called aurora borealis, aurora polaris, or northern lights, and in the Southern Hemisphere they are called aurora australis or southern lights.
- Aurora (fresco by Guercino)
Il Guercino: The main fresco, “Aurora,” on the ceiling of the Grand Hall, is a spirited romantic work, painted to appear as though there were no ceiling, so that the viewer could see Aurora’s chariot moving directly over the building. Yet it already reveals something of the crucial experience of…
- Aurora (Hungarian literary almanac)
Károly Kisfaludy: …to publish his literary almanac, Aurora, which became the chief literary vehicle of the coming generation of Hungarian Romantics: József Bajza, Mihály Vörösmarty, and Ferenc Kölcsey.
- Aurora (manuscript by Böhme)
Jakob Böhme: Writings: The manuscript was entitled Aurora, oder Morgenröthe im Aufgang (1612; Aurora) and was written in stages. Called by Böhme a “childlike beginning,” it was a conglomeration of theology, philosophy, and what then passed for astrology, all bound together by a common devotional theme. Circulating among Böhme’s friends, a copy…
- Aurora (Russian ship)
St. Petersburg: Petrograd Side: …Nevka River begins, the cruiser Aurora is permanently moored as a museum and training vessel for the Naval College. It was the Aurora that in 1917 fired the blank shot that served as the signal to storm the Winter Palace during the October Revolution.
- Aurora (work by Stirling)
William Alexander, 1st earl of Stirling: …in 1604, his best-known work, Aurora, a sonnet sequence that outlived his subsequent didactic tragedies. In 1608 Stirling became agent, in partnership with his cousin, for collecting debts owed to the crown in Scotland during the period 1547–88, retaining a 50 percent reward. He was knighted that same year. His…
- Aurora (island, Vanuatu)
Maéwo, island of Vanuatu, in the southwestern Pacific Ocean, 65 miles (105 km) east of the island of Espiritu Santo. It is volcanic in origin and is some 35 miles (55 km) long by 4.5 miles (7.5 km) wide, with an area of about 100 square miles (260 square km). Maéwo’s central mountain range rises to
- Aurora 7 (spacecraft)
Scott Carpenter: …on May 24, 1962, in Aurora 7.
- aurora australis (atmospheric phenomenon)
southern lights, luminous atmospheric display visible in the Southern Hemisphere. See
- aurora borealis (atmospheric phenomenon)
northern lights, luminous atmospheric display visible in the Northern Hemisphere. See
- Aurora Leigh (work by Browning)
Aurora Leigh, novel in blank verse by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, published in 1857. The first-person narrative, which comprises some 11,000 lines, tells of the heroine’s childhood and youth in Italy and England, her self-education in her father’s hidden library, and her successful pursuit of a
- aurora polaris (atmospheric phenomenon)
northern lights, luminous atmospheric display visible in the Northern Hemisphere. See
- Aurora University (university, Aurora, Illinois, United States)
Aurora: Aurora University (originally Mendota Seminary), founded in 1893 at Mendota by the Advent Christian Church, relocated to Aurora in 1912; its campus includes a centre for Native American culture. Waubonsee Community College, named for a local Potawatomi chief, was established in 1966 in Sugar Grove,…
- Aurora, oder Morgenröthe im Aufgang (manuscript by Böhme)
Jakob Böhme: Writings: The manuscript was entitled Aurora, oder Morgenröthe im Aufgang (1612; Aurora) and was written in stages. Called by Böhme a “childlike beginning,” it was a conglomeration of theology, philosophy, and what then passed for astrology, all bound together by a common devotional theme. Circulating among Böhme’s friends, a copy…
- auroral electrojet (meteorology)
geomagnetic field: Convective electrojets: The auroral electrojets are two broad sheets of electric current that flow from noon toward midnight in the northern and southern auroral ovals. The dawn-side current flows westward, creating a decrease in the magnetic field on the surface. The dusk-side current flows eastward…
- auroral oval (meteorology)
aurora: …part to high latitudes in oval-shaped zones that surround Earth’s magnetic poles and maintain a more or less fixed orientation with respect to the Sun. During periods of low solar activity, the auroral zones shift poleward. During periods of intense solar activity, auroras occasionally extend to the middle latitudes; for…
- auroral zone (meteorology)
aurora: …part to high latitudes in oval-shaped zones that surround Earth’s magnetic poles and maintain a more or less fixed orientation with respect to the Sun. During periods of low solar activity, the auroral zones shift poleward. During periods of intense solar activity, auroras occasionally extend to the middle latitudes; for…
- Aurornis xui (fossil animal)
Archaeopteryx: zhengi and Aurornis xui, species thought to have lived some 5 million and 10 million years before Archaeopteryx, respectively, as well as others. Thus, these paleontologists claim that Archaeopteryx cannot in fact be the world’s most primitive bird, and many of the features used to describe birds…
- aurosmiridium (alloy)
iridium: … up to 77 percent, in aurosmiridium 52 percent, and in native platinum up to 7.5 percent. Iridium generally is produced commercially along with the other platinum metals as a by-product of nickel or copper production.
- aurostibite (mineral)
antimonide: Other antimonides include aurostibite (AuSb2) and breithauptite (NiSb).
- Auroville (township, India)
Puducherry: … is in the city, and Auroville (established 1968), an international township and study centre named for him, is just to the north. Popular film director M. Night Shyamalan was born in the city in 1970. Pop. (2001) city, 220,865; urban agglom., 505,959; (2011) city, 244,377; urban agglom., 657,209.
- aurresku (dance)
aurresku, Basque folk dance of courtship, in which the men perform spirited acrobatic displays for their partners; it is one of the most elaborate European folk dances of this type. It begins as a chain dance for men, in which the leader and last man break off, dance competitively, and rejoin the
- aurum (chemical element)
gold (Au), chemical element, a dense lustrous yellow precious metal of Group 11 (Ib), Period 6, of the periodic table of the elements. Gold has several qualities that have made it exceptionally valuable throughout history. It is attractive in colour and brightness, durable to the point of virtual
- aurum coronarium (Roman tax measurement)
ancient Rome: Caracalla: …taxes, and often required the aurum coronarium (a contribution in gold), thereby ruining the urban middle classes. To counter the effects of a general upward drift of prices and the larger and better-paid army of his own and his father’s making, he created a new silver coin, the antoninianus. It…
- Aurunci (ancient Italian tribe)
Aurunci, ancient tribe of Campania, in Italy. They were exterminated by the Romans in 314 bc as the culmination of 50 years of Roman military campaigns against them. The Aurunci occupied a strip of coast situated between the Volturnus and Liris (Volturno and Liri) rivers in what is now the province
- Aury, Luis (Argentine soldier)
flag of Guatemala: …into the area by Captain Luis Aury, a privateer sent by the Argentines to stir up rebellion in other Spanish colonies. Subsequently other variations of the national flag and coat of arms were displayed; it was not until 1871 that the basic flag used by Guatemala today was introduced.
- Aus dem bürgerlichen Heldenleben (work by Sternheim)
Carl Sternheim: …through 1916, being collectively titled Aus dem bürgerlichen Heldenleben (“From the Lives of Bourgeois Heroes”). The first play, Die Hose (The Underpants), was published and performed in 1911 under the title Der Riese (“The Giant”) because the Berlin police had forbidden the original title on the grounds of gross immorality.…
- Aus dem Tonleben unserer Zeit (work by Hiller)
Ferdinand Hiller: …conductor and composer whose memoirs, Aus dem Tonleben unserer Zeit (1867–76; “From the Musical Life of Our Time”), contain revealing sidelights on many famous contemporaries.
- Aus Italien (work by Strauss)
Richard Strauss: Life: …being his Aus Italien (1886; From Italy), a “symphonic fantasy” based on his impressions during his first visit to Italy. In Weimar in November 1889, he conducted the first performance of his symphonic poem Don Juan. The triumphant reception of this piece led to Strauss’s acclamation as Wagner’s heir and…
- Aus meinem Leben (work by Arneth)
Alfred, Ritter von Arneth: His early reminiscences, Aus meinem Leben, appeared in 1893.
- Aus meinem Leben: Dichtung und Wahrheit (autobiography by Goethe)
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: Napoleonic period (1805–16) of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: …Leben: Dichtung und Wahrheit (1811–13; From My Life: Poetry and Truth).
- Aus Sibirien (work by Radlov)
Vasily Radlov: …of northern and Central Asia, Aus Sibirien (1884; “From Siberia”), which advanced a three-stage theory of cultural evolution for the region—hunting to pastoral to agricultural—with shamanism as the main religion. He also translated (1891–1910) Kudatku Bilik, a long medieval poem of the Uighur people.
- Ausa (Spain)
Vic, city, Barcelona provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Catalonia, northeastern Spain. The city is situated on the Vic Plain and lies along the Meder River, which is an affluent of the Ter River. Because it was first inhabited by the Ausetanos, an ancient
- Auschwitz (concentration camp, Poland)
Auschwitz, Nazi Germany’s largest concentration camp and extermination camp. Located near the industrial town of Oświęcim in southern Poland (in a portion of the country that was annexed by Germany at the beginning of World War II), Auschwitz was actually three camps in one: a prison camp, an
- Auschwitz (Poland)
Oświęcim, city, Małopolskie województwo (province), southern Poland. It lies at the confluence of the Vistula and Soła rivers. A rail junction and industrial centre, the town became associated with the nearby sites of a Nazi concentration and extermination camp complex known as Auschwitz, the first
- Auschwitz-Birkenau (concentration camp, Poland)
Auschwitz, Nazi Germany’s largest concentration camp and extermination camp. Located near the industrial town of Oświęcim in southern Poland (in a portion of the country that was annexed by Germany at the beginning of World War II), Auschwitz was actually three camps in one: a prison camp, an
- Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum (museum, Oświęcim, Poland)
Holocaust museum: Holocaust museums in Israel and Europe: The Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum, located outside the town of Oświęcim, Poland, was organized by former prisoners of the notorious camp. When it opened in 1947, visitors could view for the first time the gas chambers, burning pits, and crematoriums used to murder hundreds of thousands of…
- Auschwitz-Birkenau. The Nazi German Concentration and Extermination Camp (1940–-1945) (concentration camp, Poland)
Auschwitz, Nazi Germany’s largest concentration camp and extermination camp. Located near the industrial town of Oświęcim in southern Poland (in a portion of the country that was annexed by Germany at the beginning of World War II), Auschwitz was actually three camps in one: a prison camp, an
- Ausculta fili (work by Boniface VIII)
Boniface VIII: Conflicts with Philip IV of France: …here, and in the bull Ausculta fili (“Listen Son”) he sharply rebuked Philip and demanded amends, especially the release of the bishop, who had appealed to Rome. Instead, the king’s chancellor, Pierre Flotte, was allowed to circulate a distorted extract of the bull and thus to prepare public opinion for…
- auscultation (medicine)
auscultation, diagnostic procedure in which the physician listens to sounds within the body to detect certain defects or conditions, such as heart-valve malfunctions or pregnancy. Auscultation originally was performed by placing the ear directly on the chest or abdomen, but it has been practiced
- Ausdehnungslehre (work by Grassmann)
history of logic: Charles Sanders Peirce: …Grassmann published in 1844 his Ausdehnungslehre (“The Theory of Extension”), in which he used a novel and difficult notation to explore quantities (“extensions”) of all sorts—logical extension and intension, numerical, spatial, temporal, and so on. Grassmann’s notion of extension is very similar to the use of the broad term “quantity”…
- Ausdruckstanz (German dance)
Western dance: The 20th century: …forms earned it the name Ausdruckstanz (“expressionistic dance”). The ballroom dances were thoroughly revolutionized through infusions of new vitality from South American, Creole, and Black sources. With the overwhelming popularity of Afro-American jazz, the entire spirit and style of social dancing altered radically, becoming vastly more free, relaxed, and intimate…
- Auseklis (Baltic deity)
Auseklis, in Baltic religion, the morning star and deity of the dawn. The Latvian Auseklis was a male god, the Lithuanian Aušrinė a female. Related in name to the Vedic Uṣas and the Greek Eos, goddesses of dawn, Auseklis is associated in Latvian solar mythology with Mēness (Moon) and Saule (Sun),
- Ausfragemethode (psychology)
Karl Bühler: …called this experimental technique the Ausfragemethode—“inquiry method.” After serving in the German Army during World War I, Bühler was named professor of psychiatry at the University of Vienna in 1922. He was forced to flee to Norway in 1938, and he reached the United States in 1939, residing there until…
- Ausführliche Redekunst (work by Gottsched)
Johann Christoph Gottsched: …for style, advanced by his Ausführliche Redekunst (1736; “Complete Rhetoric”) and Grundlegung einer deutschen Sprachkunst (1748; “Foundation of a German Literary Language”), helped to regularize German as a literary language.
- Ausgeführte Bauten (work by Wright)
Frank Lloyd Wright: Europe and Japan: …record of his buildings (Ausgeführte Bauten, 1911; “Executed Buildings”). With a draftsman, Taylor Willey, and his eldest son, Lloyd Wright, the architect produced the numerous beautiful drawings published in these portfolios by reworking renderings brought from Chicago, Oak Park, and Wisconsin.
- Ausgeführte Bauten und Entwürfe (work by Wright)
Frank Lloyd Wright: Europe and Japan: …portfolio of his drawings (Ausgeführte Bauten und Entwürfe, 1910; Studies and Executed Buildings) and a smaller but full photographic record of his buildings (Ausgeführte Bauten, 1911; “Executed Buildings”). With a draftsman, Taylor Willey, and his eldest son, Lloyd Wright, the architect produced the numerous beautiful drawings published in these…
- Ausgleich (Austro-Hungarian history)
Ausgleich, the compact, finally concluded on Feb. 8, 1867, that regulated the relations between Austria and Hungary and established the Dual Monarchy of Austria-Hungary. The kingdom of Hungary had desired equal status with the Austrian Empire, which was weakened by its defeat in the Seven Weeks’
- Ausi (king of Israel)
Hoshea, in the Old Testament (2 Kings 15:30; 17:1–6), son of Elah and last king of Israel (c. 732–724 bc). He became king through a conspiracy in which his predecessor, Pekah, was killed. The Assyrian king Tiglath-pileser III claimed that he made Hoshea king, and Hoshea paid an annual tribute to
- Auslander, Joseph (American author)
Joseph Auslander was an American novelist and lyric poet who was noted for his war poems. Auslander attended Columbia and Harvard universities, graduating from the latter in 1917. He taught English at Harvard for several years before studying at the Sorbonne in Paris on a Parker fellowship. In 1929
- Auslöschung: ein Zerfall (novel by Bernhard)
German literature: The 1970s and ’80s: Auslöschung: ein Zerfall (1986; Extinction), by Thomas Bernhard, takes the form of a violently insistent and seemingly interminable diatribe by a first-person narrator who returns from Rome to Austria for a family funeral. Bernhard’s novel expresses intense feelings of disgust and anger about Austria’s collaboration in Nazism. Elfriede Jelinek’s…
- Ausona (Spain)
Vic, city, Barcelona provincia (province), in the comunidad autónoma (autonomous community) of Catalonia, northeastern Spain. The city is situated on the Vic Plain and lies along the Meder River, which is an affluent of the Ter River. Because it was first inhabited by the Ausetanos, an ancient
- Ausones (ancient Italian tribe)
Aurunci: The name Ausones, the Greek form from which the Latin Aurunci was derived, was applied by the Greeks to various Italic tribes, but the name came to denote in particular the tribe that the great Roman historian Livy called Aurunci. The name was later applied to all…
- Ausonius, Decimus Magnus (Latin poet and rhetorician)
Decimus Magnus Ausonius was a Latin poet and rhetorician interesting chiefly for his preoccupation with the provincial scene of his native Gaul. Ausonius taught in the famous schools of Burdigala (now Bordeaux, Fr.), first as a grammarian and then as a rhetorician, so successfully that Valentinian
- Auspicious Incident (Ottoman history)
Janissary: …June 1826 in the so-called Auspicious Incident. On learning of the formation of new, Westernized troops, the Janissaries revolted. Sultan Mahmud II declared war on the rebels and, on their refusal to surrender, had cannon fire directed on their barracks. Most of the Janissaries were killed, and those who were…
- Ausra (Lithuanian political magazine)
Jonas Basanavičius: …Lithuanian cultural and political magazine Aušra (“Dawn”), published 1883–86; it was printed in East Prussia and had to be smuggled into Lithuania because of the tsarist regime’s ban on the printing of Lithuanian in the Latin alphabet. Aušra significantly influenced the development of the Lithuanian national movement.
- Ausrine (Baltic deity)
Auseklis, in Baltic religion, the morning star and deity of the dawn. The Latvian Auseklis was a male god, the Lithuanian Aušrinė a female. Related in name to the Vedic Uṣas and the Greek Eos, goddesses of dawn, Auseklis is associated in Latvian solar mythology with Mēness (Moon) and Saule (Sun),