- Alexander, Jason (American actor)
Jason Alexander is an American television, film, and stage actor best known for his portrayal of George Costanza, Jerry Seinfeld’s chronically neurotic pal, on the acclaimed situation comedy series Seinfeld (1989–98). His other notable roles include lawyer Philip Stuckey in the romantic comedy
- Alexander, John White (American artist)
James W. Alexander II: The son of John White Alexander, an American painter who created murals for the Library of Congress, James studied mathematics and physics at Princeton University, obtaining a B.S. degree in 1910 and an M.S. degree the following year. For the next few years he traveled and studied in…
- Alexander, Kwame (American poet and children’s author)
Kwame Alexander is an American poet, author of young adult and children’s fiction, and advocate for introducing literary works and the art of writing to schoolchildren. He gained national prominence after winning the Newbery Medal in 2015 for his novel The Crossover (2014), much of which he wrote
- Alexander, Lamar (United States senator)
Lamar Alexander is an American politician who was elected as a Republican to the U.S. Senate in 2002 and began representing Tennessee the following year. He previously served as governor of the state (1979–87). A seventh-generation Tennessean, Alexander was born in Maryville, the son of a
- Alexander, Lincoln (Canadian politician)
Lincoln Alexander was a Canadian politician and lawyer who was the first Black member of the Canadian Parliament, serving in the House of Commons (1968–80); the first Black cabinet member, as minister of labour (1979–80); and the first Black person to hold a viceregal office in Canada, as the 24th
- Alexander, Lincoln MacCauley (Canadian politician)
Lincoln Alexander was a Canadian politician and lawyer who was the first Black member of the Canadian Parliament, serving in the House of Commons (1968–80); the first Black cabinet member, as minister of labour (1979–80); and the first Black person to hold a viceregal office in Canada, as the 24th
- Alexander, Margaret (American author and poet)
Margaret Walker was an American novelist and poet who was one of the leading black woman writers of the mid-20th century. After graduating from Northwestern University (B.A., 1935), Walker joined the Federal Writers’ Project in Chicago, where she began a brief literary relationship with novelist
- Alexander, Meena (Indian poet and teacher)
Meena Alexander was an Indian poet and teacher whose works reflect her multicultural life in India, Sudan, and the United States. Educated at the University of Khartoum in Sudan (B.A., 1969) and at the University of Nottingham in England (Ph.D., 1973), Alexander held a number of teaching positions
- Alexander, Sadie Tanner Mossell (American economist and attorney)
Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander was an economist and attorney who was one of the first African American women in the United States to earn a doctoral degree. Alexander served in the administration of Pres. Harry S. Truman as a member of the President’s Committee on Civil Rights (1946). She helped
- Alexander, Samuel (British philosopher)
Samuel Alexander was a philosopher who developed a metaphysics of emergent evolution involving time, space, matter, mind, and deity. After studying in Melbourne, Alexander went to Balliol College, Oxford, in 1877 on a scholarship. In 1887 he received the Green Prize for “Moral Order and Progress”
- Alexander, Shaun (American football player)
Shaun Alexander is an American professional gridiron football player who was one of the most prolific touchdown scorers in National Football League (NFL) history. Named a high-school All-American by Parade magazine and USA Today in 1995, Alexander earned the nickname “Mr. Touchdown” early in his
- Alexander, Sir Harold (British general)
Harold Alexander, 1st Earl Alexander was a prominent British field marshal in World War II noted for his North African campaigns against Field Marshal Erwin Rommel and for his later commands in Italy and western Europe. The third son of the 4th Earl of Caledon, Alexander was educated at Harrow and
- Alexander, Sir William (British statesman)
William Alexander, 1st earl of Stirling was a Scottish courtier, statesman, and poet who founded and colonized the region of Nova Scotia in Canada. When King James VI of Scotland ascended the English throne as James I in 1603, Alexander attended his court in London. He there wrote, in 1604, his
- Alexanderplatz, Berlin (work by Döblin)
Berlin Alexanderplatz, novel by Alfred Döblin, published in 1929. It appeared in English under the original title and as Alexanderplatz, Berlin. It tells the story of Franz Biberkopf, a Berlin petty criminal who tries to rehabilitate himself after his release from jail. Often compared to James
- Alexanderson, Ernst F.W. (American electrical engineer)
Ernst F.W. Alexanderson was an electrical engineer and television pioneer who developed a high-frequency alternator (a device that converts direct current into alternating current) capable of producing continuous radio waves and thereby revolutionized radio communication. In 1901 Alexanderson
- Alexanderson, Ernst Frederik Werner (American electrical engineer)
Ernst F.W. Alexanderson was an electrical engineer and television pioneer who developed a high-frequency alternator (a device that converts direct current into alternating current) capable of producing continuous radio waves and thereby revolutionized radio communication. In 1901 Alexanderson
- Alexandra (empress consort of Russia)
Alexandra was the consort of the Russian emperor Nicholas II. Her misrule while the emperor was commanding the Russian forces during World War I precipitated the collapse of the imperial government in March 1917. A granddaughter of Queen Victoria and daughter of Louis IV, grand duke of
- Alexandra (queen consort of Great Britain)
Alexandra was the queen consort of King Edward VII of Great Britain. The eldest daughter of Christian IX of Denmark, Alexandra was married to Edward (then Albert Edward, prince of Wales) in St. George’s Chapel, Windsor, on March 10, 1863. The exceptional beauty and graceful manner of the princess
- Alexandra (poem by Lycophron of Chalcis)
Lycophron of Chalcis: …him of the extant poem Alexandra.
- Alexandra (New Zealand)
Alexandra, town, south-central South Island, New Zealand. It lies at the junction of the Clutha and Manuherikia rivers and is surrounded by three mountain ranges. Originally known as Lower Dunstan and Manuherikia, the settlement was named Alexandra South in 1863 to commemorate the marriage of the
- Alexandra (empress of Russia)
Nicholas I: Education: …Princess Charlotte of Prussia (Alexandra, after she became Orthodox).
- Alexandra Caroline Mary Charlotte Louisa Julia (queen consort of Great Britain)
Alexandra was the queen consort of King Edward VII of Great Britain. The eldest daughter of Christian IX of Denmark, Alexandra was married to Edward (then Albert Edward, prince of Wales) in St. George’s Chapel, Windsor, on March 10, 1863. The exceptional beauty and graceful manner of the princess
- Alexandra Falls (waterfall, Northwest Territories, Canada)
Hay River: The 103-foot (32-metre) Alexandra Falls on the Hay River are 34 miles (55 km) south of the town. Pop. (2006) 3,648; (2011) 3,606.
- Alexandra Palace (conference center, Haringey, London, United Kingdom)
Haringey: Alexandra Palace, with its surrounding park, was built in the late 19th century as an arts and entertainment complex, and it became the original home of British Broadcasting Television in 1936. After a fire in 1980, it was restored (1988) to serve as an exhibition…
- Alexandra Township (area, Johannesburg, South Africa)
Johannesburg: The city layout: Alexandra township, a 20-square-block enclave carved out of Johannesburg’s white northern suburbs, houses a population of nearly half a million. At least three times that number live in Soweto (South-West Townships), a sprawling urban complex 10 miles southwest of the city. Johannesburg’s small Coloured population…
- Alexandre III Bridge (bridge, Paris, France)
Paris: The Invalides of Paris: …the Quai d’Orsay and the Alexandre III Bridge. The first stone for the bridge, which commemorates the Russian tsar Alexander III, was laid in 1897 by Alexander’s son, Tsar Nicholas II. The bridge was finished in time for the International Exposition of 1900, and it leads to two other souvenirs…
- Alexandre le grand (play by Racine)
Molière: Harassment by the authorities: …Racine transferred his next play, Alexandre le Grand, to a longer-established theatre while Molière’s actors were actually performing it, which turned the two men against each other. Molière was constantly harassed by the authorities, especially the ecclesiastical ones for the challenge to orthodoxy they saw in his plays. These setbacks…
- Alexandre, Paul (art patron)
Amedeo Modigliani: …artist Pablo Picasso, and—in 1907—with Paul Alexandre, a friend of many avant-garde artists and the first to become interested in Modigliani and to buy his works. In 1908 the artist exhibited five or six paintings at the Salon des Indépendants.
- Alexandreis (12th-century epic)
Latin literature: The 12th to the 14th century: …Châtillon’s foray into epic, the Alexandreis (written c. 1180), is one of the most distinguished products of the medieval fascination with the legends of Alexander the Great, and it exercised an immense influence on subsequent vernacular literature.
- Alexandreschate (ancient city, Egypt)
ancient Greek civilization: The conquest of Bactria and the Indus valley: …Alexander founded the city of Alexandreschate (“Alexandria the Farthest”), not far from the site of Cyropolis, a city of Cyrus II the Great, whom Alexander highly admired. This is a reminder that Persian urbanization in Central Asia had not been negligible. (At the interesting Bactrian site of Ai Khanum, which…
- Alexandrescu, Grigore (Romanian author)
Romanian literature: The national renaissance: …enriched the Romantic heritage was Grigore Alexandrescu. Alexandrescu wrote Poezii (1832, 1838, and 1839) and Meditaƫii (1863), fables and satires influenced mostly by French writers. A literary magazine, Dacia Literară, edited by Mihail Kogălniceanu, a leading statesman and father of modern Romanian historiography (1840), marked a beginning of the traditionalist…
- Alexandretta (Turkey)
İskenderun, seaport and chief city of İskenderun ilçe (district), Hatay il (province), southern Turkey. Located on the eastern shore of the Gulf of Iskenderun, it lies on or near the site of Alexandria ad Issum, founded to commemorate Alexander the Great’s victory over Darius III at Issus (333
- Alexandria (Egypt)
Alexandria, major city and urban muḥāfaẓah (governorate) in Egypt. Once among the greatest cities of the Mediterranean world and a centre of Hellenic scholarship and science, Alexandria was the capital of Egypt from its founding by Alexander the Great in 332 bce until its surrender to the Arab
- Alexandria (Tennessee, United States)
Jackson, city, seat (1821) of Madison county, western Tennessee, U.S. It lies about 80 miles (130 km) northeast of Memphis. The area was settled about 1819 as a port on the Forked Deer River and developed as a cotton depot and railroad junction. First called Alexandria, the community was renamed in
- Alexandria (Scotland, United Kingdom)
West Dunbartonshire: …council area’s administrative centre, and Alexandria, near Loch Lomond, supports tourism and whisky distilling. Area 61 square miles (159 square km). Pop. (2001) 93,378; (2011) 90,720.
- Alexandria (Virginia, United States)
Alexandria, city, adjoining Arlington and Fairfax counties, northern Virginia, U.S. It lies on the Potomac River (there bridged at the Maryland state line), 6 miles (10 km) south of the District of Columbia. A fort was built on the site in 1676 to defend the area from attacks by Susquehannock
- Alexandria (Minnesota, United States)
Alexandria, city, seat of Douglas county, west-central Minnesota, U.S. It is situated about 70 miles (115 km) northwest of St. Cloud in a lake-resort and dairy-farm region. Settled in 1858 on land that was once part of Ojibwa and Sioux camping grounds, Alexandria was organized as a township in 1866
- Alexandria (Louisiana, United States)
Alexandria, city, seat of Rapides parish, central Louisiana, U.S. The city lies along the Red River, opposite Pineville, about 100 miles (160 km) northwest of Baton Rouge. It was laid out (1805) at the rapids that then marked the head of river navigation and was named for the daughter of Alexander
- Alexandria (Romania)
Alexandria, town, capital of Teleorman judeƫ (county), southern Romania. It lies along the southward-flowing Vedea River in the Danube floodplain. Alexandria is a regional marketing centre for agricultural produce, mostly grain. The town also has flour mills and other food-processing plants.
- Alexandria Eschate (Tajikistan)
Khujand, city, northwestern Tajikistan. The city lies along both banks of the Syr Darya (river) at the entrance to the fertile and heavily populated Fergana Valley. One of the most ancient cities of Central Asia, it lay along the great Silk Road from China to Europe. It was captured by the Arabs in
- Alexandria Municipal Museum (museum, Alexandria, Egypt)
Graeco Roman Museum, museum of Greek and Roman antiquities in Alexandria, Egypt, that was founded in 1892. It is housed in a Greek Revival-style building that opened in 1895 and that was expanded in subsequent decades. The museum contains material found in Alexandria itself; Ptolemaic and Roman
- Alexandria Protocol (1944)
Palestine: World War II: …and issued a statement, the Alexandria Protocol, setting out the Arab position. They made clear that, although they regretted the bitter fate inflicted upon European Jewry by European dictatorships, the issue of European Jewish survivors ought not to be confused with Zionism. Solving the problem of European Jewry, they asserted,…
- Alexandria Quartet, The (work by Durrell)
The Alexandria Quartet, series of four novels by Lawrence Durrell. The lush and sensuous tetralogy, which consists of Justine (1957), Balthazar (1958), Mountolive (1958), and Clea (1960), is set in Alexandria, Egypt, during the 1940s. Three of the books are written in the first person, Mountolive
- Alexandria the Farthest (ancient city, Egypt)
ancient Greek civilization: The conquest of Bactria and the Indus valley: …Alexander founded the city of Alexandreschate (“Alexandria the Farthest”), not far from the site of Cyropolis, a city of Cyrus II the Great, whom Alexander highly admired. This is a reminder that Persian urbanization in Central Asia had not been negligible. (At the interesting Bactrian site of Ai Khanum, which…
- Alexandria University (university, Egypt)
Alexandria: Education: Alexandria University (1942), the principal public university, lies just east of the city centre. Instruction is generally given in Arabic, although English is an important second language and is widely used in a number of professional programs. A private, francophone, international university named in honour…
- Alexandria, Library of (ancient library, Alexandria, Egypt)
Library of Alexandria, the most famous library of Classical antiquity. It formed part of the research institute at Alexandria in Egypt that is known as the Alexandrian Museum (Mouseion, “shrine of the Muses”). Libraries and archives were known to many ancient civilizations in Egypt, Mesopotamia,
- Alexandria, Museum of (ancient institution, Alexandria, Egypt)
Alexandrian Museum, ancient centre of classical learning at Alexandria in Egypt. A research institute that was especially noted for its scientific and literary scholarship, the Alexandrian Museum was built near the royal palace about the 3rd century bce possibly by Ptolemy I Soter (reigned
- Alexandria, Orthodox Church of (religion)
Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Alexandria, autocephalous, or ecclesiastically independent, Eastern Orthodox patriarchate, second in honorific rank after the Church of Constantinople; its patriarch is considered the successor of St. Mark the Evangelist and heads the Orthodox Church in Africa. The
- Alexandria, School of (institution, Alexandria, Egypt)
School of Alexandria, the first Christian institution of higher learning, founded in the mid-2nd century ad in Alexandria, Egypt. Under its earliest known leaders (Pantaenus, Clement, and Origen), it became a leading centre of the allegorical method of biblical interpretation, espoused a
- Alexandria, Synod of (religion)
Synod of Alexandria, (362 ce), a meeting of Christian bishops held in Alexandria, Egypt, summoned by the bishop of Alexandria, St. Athanasius, in an appeal for unity among those who held the same faith but differed in terminology. The synod allowed clergy who had been readmitted to communion after
- Alexandria-Kapisu (Afghanistan)
South Asian arts: Indian sculpture from the 1st to 4th centuries ce: Mathura: Ivory plaques discovered at Bagrām (Begrām) in Afghanistan are closely related to the school of Mathura. These are of great importance; for, though ivory must have been a favourite medium of sculpture, little has been preserved of the early work. Most of it is in very low engraved relief,…
- Alexandrian canon (biblical literature)
Aristophanes Of Byzantium: …the foundation of the so-called Alexandrian Canon, a selection in each genre of literary work that contemporaries considered to be models of excellence.
- Alexandrian laurel (tree)
Alexandrian laurel, (Calophyllum inophyllum), evergreen plant (family Calophyllaceae) cultivated as an ornamental throughout tropical areas. Alexandrian laurel ranges from East Africa to Australia and is often cultivated near the ocean; it is resistant to salt spray and has a leaning habit. Dilo, a
- Alexandrian Museum (ancient institution, Alexandria, Egypt)
Alexandrian Museum, ancient centre of classical learning at Alexandria in Egypt. A research institute that was especially noted for its scientific and literary scholarship, the Alexandrian Museum was built near the royal palace about the 3rd century bce possibly by Ptolemy I Soter (reigned
- Alexandrian rite
Alexandrian rite, the system of liturgical practices and discipline in use among Egyptian and Ethiopian Christians of both the Eastern-rite Catholic and independent Christian churches. The Alexandrian rite is historically associated with John Mark, a disciple of the Apostles, who traveled to
- Alexandrian senna (plant)
senna: Alexandrian senna (Senna alexandrina), from Egypt, Sudan, and Nigeria, and Cassia sieberana, found from Senegal to Uganda, are cultivated in India for their cathartic properties. Tanner’s senna, or avaram (S. auriculata), a tall shrub, is a principal native tanbark in southern India.
- Alexandrians, Letter of Paul to the (New Testament Apocrypha)
biblical literature: Letters: …Letter of Barnabas, a lost Letter of Paul to the Alexandrians (said to have been forged by followers of Marcion), the late 2nd-century letter called “III Corinthians” (part of the Acts of Paul and composed largely out of the genuine letters of St. Paul), along with a letter from the…
- Alexandrina Victoria (queen of United Kingdom)
Victoria was the queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (1837–1901) and empress of India (1876–1901). She was the last of the house of Hanover and gave her name to an era, the Victorian Age. During her reign the British monarchy took on its modern ceremonial character. She and her
- Alexandrina, Lake (lake, South Australia, Australia)
Lake Alexandrina, estuarine lagoon, southeastern South Australia, 45 miles (70 km) southeast of Adelaide. Together with contiguous Lake Albert and the long, narrow lagoon called The Coorong, it forms the mouth of the Murray River. About 23 miles (37 km) long and 13 miles (21 km) wide, the lake has
- alexandrine (prosody)
alexandrine, verse form that is the leading measure in French poetry. It consists of a line of 12 syllables with major stresses on the 6th syllable (which precedes the medial caesura [pause]) and on the last syllable, and one secondary accent in each half line. Because six syllables is a normal
- Alexandrine rat (rodent)
rat: …the Norway rat), and the house rat, R. rattus (also called the black rat, ship rat, or roof rat), live virtually everywhere that human populations have settled; the house rat is predominant in warmer climates, and the brown rat dominates in temperate regions, especially urban areas. Most likely originating in…
- Alexandrine schism (Roman Catholic history)
papacy: The medieval papacy: The Alexandrine schism led to the decision of the third Lateran Council (1179) to require a two-thirds majority vote of the cardinals to elect a pope. The papacy also faced challenges posed by the efforts of Italian cities to secure independence from imperial or episcopal control…
- Alexandrinum opus (mosaic)
opus alexandrinum, in mosaic, type of decorative pavement work widely used in Byzantium in the 9th century. It utilized tiny, geometrically shaped pieces of coloured stone and glass paste that were arranged in intricate geometric patterns dotted with large disks of semiprecious stones. The
- Alexandrist (Italian philosophy)
Alexandrist, any of the Italian philosophers of the Renaissance who, in the controversy about personal immortality, followed the explanation of Aristotle’s De anima (On the Soul) given by Alexander of Aphrodisias, who held that it denied individual immortality. Thomas Aquinas and his followers had
- alexandrite (gemstone)
chrysoberyl: Alexandrite is a remarkable and valued variety that when viewed along the different crystallographic (optical) axes, changes from columbine red to orange yellow to emerald green. In addition, the stone changes from green in daylight to red in artificial light.
- Alexandrium (dinoflagellate genus)
algae: Annotated classification: …in the class Dinophyceae; includes Alexandrium, Ceratium, Dinophysis, Gonyaulax, Gymnodinium, Noctiluca, Peridinium, and Polykrikos. Division
- Alexandroff, Pavel Sergeyevich (Soviet mathematician)
Pavel Sergeevich Aleksandrov was a Russian mathematician who made important contributions to topology. In 1897 Aleksandrov moved with his family to Smolensk, where his father had accepted a position as a surgeon with the Smolensk State Hospital. His early education was supplied by his mother, who
- Alexandropol (Armenia)
Gyumri, city, western Armenia. It is believed to have been founded by the Greeks in 401 bce, but it did not have a continuous existence. A fortress was constructed on the site by the Russians in 1837, and in 1840 the town of Alexandropol was founded nearby. Alexandropol was a trading and
- Alexandropol, Treaty of (Turkish history)
Kemal Atatürk: The nationalist movement and the war for independence: By the Treaty of Alexandropol (December 3, 1920) and the Treaty of Moscow (March 16, 1921), the nationalists regained the eastern provinces, as well as the cities of Kars and Ardahan, and the Soviet Union became the first nation to recognize the nationalist government in Ankara. Turkey’s eastern borders…
- Alexandros (Greek mythology)
Paris, in Greek legend, son of King Priam of Troy and his wife, Hecuba. A dream regarding his birth was interpreted as an evil portent, and he was consequently expelled from his family as an infant. Left for dead, he was either nursed by a bear or found by shepherds. He was raised as a shepherd,
- Alexandroúpoli (Greece)
Alexandroúpoli, seaport and dímos (municipality), East Macedonia and Thrace (Modern Greek: Anatolikí Makedonía kai Thráki) periféreia (region), northeastern Greece. It is situated in the Greek portion of the ancient and modern region of Thrace northwest of the Maritsa (Évros) River estuary on the
- Alexandroúpolis (Greece)
Alexandroúpoli, seaport and dímos (municipality), East Macedonia and Thrace (Modern Greek: Anatolikí Makedonía kai Thráki) periféreia (region), northeastern Greece. It is situated in the Greek portion of the ancient and modern region of Thrace northwest of the Maritsa (Évros) River estuary on the
- Alexandrovich, Michael, Grand Duke (Russian noble)
Russian Provisional Government: Creation of the Provisional Government: When his brother Grand Duke Michael refused the throne, the Romanov dynasty came to an end. The demise of the empire saw the emergence of two separate authorities, both claiming to speak for the people but neither representing more than a section of it: the Provisional Government and…
- Alexeïeff, Alexandre (French animator)
Alexandre Alexeïeff was a Russian-born French filmmaker who invented the pinscreen method of animation with his collaborator (later his wife), the animator Claire Parker (1910–81). Alexeïeff spent his childhood near Istanbul and studied at a naval college in St. Petersburg. After the Russian
- alexia (neurological disorder)
dyslexia, an inability or pronounced difficulty to learn to read or spell, despite otherwise normal intellectual functions. Dyslexia is a chronic neurological disorder that inhibits a person’s ability to recognize and process graphic symbols, particularly those pertaining to language. Primary
- Alexia, Princess (princess of The Netherlands)
Máxima: …was born in December 2003; Princess Alexia and Princess Ariane were born in June 2005 and April 2007, respectively. On April 30, 2013, Willem-Alexander’s mother, Queen Beatrix, formally abdicated, and he became king of the Netherlands. Upon his accession to the throne, Máxima became queen consort, and Catharina-Amalia became princess…
- Alexiad (work by Anna Comnena)
John Cinnamus: …the period 1118–76, continuing the Alexiad of Anna Comnena, covers the reigns of John II and Manuel I, down to the unsuccessful campaign against the Turks of Iconium when the Byzantines were routed (1176) at Myriocephalon. Cinnamus was probably an eyewitness to the events of the last 10 years of…
- Alexianus Bassianus (Roman emperor)
Severus Alexander was a Roman emperor from ad 222 to 235, whose weak rule collapsed in the civil strife that engulfed the empire for the next 50 years. His maternal grandmother, Julia Maesa, was a sister-in-law of the emperor Septimius Severus (reigned 193–211). In 218 the legions in Syria
- Alexie, Jr., Sherman Joseph (American author)
Sherman Alexie is a Native American writer whose poetry, short stories, novels, and films about the lives of American Indians won him an international following. Alexie was born to Salish Indians—a Coeur d’Alene father and a Spokane mother. He suffered from congenital hydrocephalus and underwent
- Alexie, Sherman (American author)
Sherman Alexie is a Native American writer whose poetry, short stories, novels, and films about the lives of American Indians won him an international following. Alexie was born to Salish Indians—a Coeur d’Alene father and a Spokane mother. He suffered from congenital hydrocephalus and underwent
- Alexievich, Svetlana (Belarusian journalist and prose writer)
Svetlana Alexievich is a Belarusian journalist and prose writer, a Russian-language author of meticulously crafted works of depth and introspection that provided a compelling and uncompromising portrayal of the social and political upheaval within the Soviet Union from the postwar era to the fall
- Alexios I Komnenos (Byzantine emperor)
Alexius I Comnenus was the Byzantine emperor (1081–1118) at the time of the First Crusade who founded the Comnenian dynasty and partially restored the strength of the empire after its defeats by the Normans and Turks in the 11th century. The third son of John Comnenus and a nephew of Isaac I
- Alexios II Komnenos (Byzantine emperor)
Alexius II Comnenus was a Byzantine emperor from 1180 to 1183. Alexius was the son of Manuel I Comnenus and Maria, daughter of Raymond, prince of Antioch. When his father died, Alexius became emperor at the age of 11, with his mother as regent. She, in turn, entrusted the government to her
- Alexios III Angelos (Byzantine emperor)
Alexius III Angelus was the Byzantine emperor from 1195 to 1203. He was the second son of Andronicus Angelus, grandson of Alexius I. In 1195 he was proclaimed emperor by the troops; he captured his brother, the emperor Isaac II, at Stagira in Macedonia and had him blinded and imprisoned. Crowned in
- Alexios IV Angelos (Byzantine emperor)
Alexius IV Angelus was the Byzantine emperor from 1203 to 1204. Alexius was the son of Emperor Isaac II. He regained control of his rights to the Byzantine throne with the help of the Fourth Crusade but was deposed soon after by a palace coup. Imprisoned in 1195 with his father (who had been
- Alexios V Doukas (Byzantine emperor)
Alexius V Ducas Mourtzouphlus was a Byzantine emperor in 1204, son-in-law of Alexius III Angelus. He led a revolt against the coemperors Isaac II and Alexius IV, who were supported by the Fourth Crusade. He then became the last emperor of Byzantium before its overthrow and partition by the
- Alexis (tsar of Russia)
Alexis was the tsar of Russia from 1645 to 1676. The son of Michael, the first Romanov monarch of Russia (reigned 1613–45), Alexis received a superficial education from his tutor Boris Ivanovich Morozov before acceding to the throne at the age of 16. Morozov, who was also Alexis’s brother-in-law,
- Alexis (prince of Russia [1904–1918])
Alexis was the only son of Nicholas II, the last tsar of Russia, and the tsarina Alexandra. He was the first male heir born to a reigning tsar since the 17th century. Alexis was a hemophiliac, and at that time there was no medical treatment that could alleviate his condition or lessen his
- Alexis (prince of Russia [1690-1718])
Alexis was the heir to the throne of Russia, who was accused of trying to overthrow his father, Peter I the Great. After his mother, Eudoxia, was forced to enter a convent (1698), Alexis was brought up by his aunts and, after 1702, was educated by the tutor Baron Heinrich von Huyssen. Although he
- Alexis (Greek writer)
Alexis was one of the foremost writers of Middle and New Comedy at Athens, a low form of comedy that succeeded the Old Comedy of Aristophanes. Alexis came from Thurii but apparently lived most of his long life in Athens; he was said to have been Menander’s uncle. According to Plutarch, he lived to
- Alexis Falconieri, Saint (Italian friar)
Seven Holy Founders: …Founders are Saints Bonfilius, Alexis Falconieri, John Bonagiunta, Benedict dell’Antella, Bartholomew Amidei, Gerard Sostegni, and Ricoverus Uguccione. Formally Ordo Fratrum Servorum Sanctae Mariae (“Order of Friar Servants of St. Mary”), the order is a Roman Catholic congregation of mendicant friars dedicated to apostolic work.
- Alexis I (patriarch of Moscow)
Alexis I was the Russian Orthodox Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia (1945–70) whose allegiance to the Soviet government helped him strengthen the structure of the church within an officially atheistic country. Born to an aristocratic family, Simansky received a law degree from the University of
- Alexis und Dora (work by Goethe)
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: Friendship with Schiller (1794–1805) of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: …his finest poems, the “idyll” Alexis und Dora. In the autumn he began an epic in the Homeric manner but set in contemporary Germany and dealing with the response of ordinary small-town people to the French Revolution and the associated wars: Herrmann und Dorothea, published in 1797, one of the…
- Alexis, Paul (French author)
French literature: Naturalism: Henry Céard, Léon Hennique, and Paul Alexis. The Naturalists purported to take a more scientifically analytic approach to the presentation of reality than had their predecessors, treating dissection as a prerequisite for description. Hence Zola’s attachment to the term naturalisme, borrowed from Hippolyte Taine, the positivist philosopher who claimed for…
- Alexis, St. (metropolitan of Moscow)
St. Alexis ; canonized 1448; feast day October 5) was the metropolitan of Moscow from 1354 to 1378 and the first representative of the Russian Orthodox Church to take a truly active role in governing Russia. Alexis became regent during the short reign of Ivan the Fair (1353–59),
- Alexis, Willibald (German writer)
Willibald Alexis was a German writer and critic best known for his historical novels about Brandenburg and Prussia. Alexis grew up in Berlin. After service as a volunteer in the campaign of 1815, he studied law at Berlin and Breslau but abandoned his legal career for writing after the success of
- Alexius Ducas Murtzuphlus (Byzantine emperor)
Alexius V Ducas Mourtzouphlus was a Byzantine emperor in 1204, son-in-law of Alexius III Angelus. He led a revolt against the coemperors Isaac II and Alexius IV, who were supported by the Fourth Crusade. He then became the last emperor of Byzantium before its overthrow and partition by the
- Alexius I Comnenus (Byzantine emperor)
Alexius I Comnenus was the Byzantine emperor (1081–1118) at the time of the First Crusade who founded the Comnenian dynasty and partially restored the strength of the empire after its defeats by the Normans and Turks in the 11th century. The third son of John Comnenus and a nephew of Isaac I
- Alexius II Comnenus (Byzantine emperor)
Alexius II Comnenus was a Byzantine emperor from 1180 to 1183. Alexius was the son of Manuel I Comnenus and Maria, daughter of Raymond, prince of Antioch. When his father died, Alexius became emperor at the age of 11, with his mother as regent. She, in turn, entrusted the government to her
- Alexius III Angelus (Byzantine emperor)
Alexius III Angelus was the Byzantine emperor from 1195 to 1203. He was the second son of Andronicus Angelus, grandson of Alexius I. In 1195 he was proclaimed emperor by the troops; he captured his brother, the emperor Isaac II, at Stagira in Macedonia and had him blinded and imprisoned. Crowned in