- Boetticher, Budd (American director)
Budd Boetticher was an American film director who was best known for a series of classic westerns that starred Randolph Scott. (Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film preservation.) Boetticher attended the Ohio State University, where he played varsity football and boxed. While
- Boetticher, Oscar, Jr. (American director)
Budd Boetticher was an American film director who was best known for a series of classic westerns that starred Randolph Scott. (Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film preservation.) Boetticher attended the Ohio State University, where he played varsity football and boxed. While
- Boeuf River (river, United States)
Boeuf River, river rising in southeastern Arkansas, U.S., and flowing southwest between the Bartholomew and Mason bayous into Louisiana, entering the Ouachita River in Catahoula Parish. Part of the river’s 230-mile (370-kilometre) course is navigable. The name Boeuf is derived from the French word
- Boeuf sur le toit, Le (ballet by Cocteau and Milhaud)
Jean Cocteau: Heritage and youth: …music by Erik Satie, and Le Boeuf sur le toit (1920; “The Ox on the Roof”), with music by Darius Milhaud, but also in his other works; and it is sometimes quoted in his plays and films.
- Boeuff River (river, United States)
Boeuf River, river rising in southeastern Arkansas, U.S., and flowing southwest between the Bartholomew and Mason bayous into Louisiana, entering the Ouachita River in Catahoula Parish. Part of the river’s 230-mile (370-kilometre) course is navigable. The name Boeuf is derived from the French word
- Boex, J.-H.-H. (French author)
children’s literature: The 20th century: …picture of prehistoric life by J.-H. Rosny (pseudonym of J.-H.-H. Boex) appeared in 1911 and has proved so durable that in 1967 an English translation, The Quest for Fire, appeared. Patapoufs et filifers, by André Maurois, a gentle satire on war, has lasted (Eng. trans. Pattypuffs and Thinifers, 1948; reissued…
- Boeyens, Adrian Florenszoon (pope)
Adrian VI was the only Dutch pope, elected in 1522. He was the last non-Italian pope until the election of John Paul II in 1978. He studied at the Catholic University of Leuven (Louvain), where he was ordained priest and became, successively, professor of theology, chancellor, and rector. The great
- BOF (metallurgy)
basic oxygen process: A typical top-blown basic oxygen furnace is a vertical cylindrical vessel with a closed bottom and an open upper cone through which a water-cooled oxygen lance can be raised and lowered. The vessel is lined with a refractory such as magnesite and is mounted on trunnions so that…
- Boff, Leonardo (Brazilian theologian)
liberation theology: … of El Salvador, Brazilian theologian Leonardo Boff, Jesuit scholar Jon Sobrino, and Archbishop Helder Câmara of Brazil.
- Boffa (Guinea)
Boffa, town and fishing port, western Guinea, West Africa, on the Pongo Estuary formed by the Fatala River on the Atlantic coast. The surrounding region is drained by the Fatala River and is mainly inhabited by the Baga and Susu (Soussou) peoples. The town is the chief trading centre for fish,
- Boffrand, Gabriel-Germain (French architect)
Germain Boffrand was a French architect noted for the great variety, quantity, and quality of his work. Boffrand went to Paris in 1681, where, after studying sculpture for a time under François Girardon, he entered the workshop of the architect Jules Hardouin Mansart. As early as 1690, he received
- Boffrand, Germain (French architect)
Germain Boffrand was a French architect noted for the great variety, quantity, and quality of his work. Boffrand went to Paris in 1681, where, after studying sculpture for a time under François Girardon, he entered the workshop of the architect Jules Hardouin Mansart. As early as 1690, he received
- Bofill, Ricardo (French architect)
Western architecture: Postmodernism: …was represented in France by Bofill’s vast housing developments, such as Les Espaces d’Abraxas in Marne-la-Vallée, near Paris (1978–83). The gargantuan scale of this columnar architecture of prefabricated concrete pushed the language of Classicism to its limits and beyond.
- Bofors Company (Swedish arms company)
artillery: Light weapons: …by the Swedish firm of Bofors. Virtually an enlarged machine gun, this fired small exploding shells at a rate of about 120 rounds per minute—fast enough to provide a dense screen of fragments through which the aircraft would have to fly. Fire control was largely visual, though some guns were…
- bog (wetland)
bog, type of wetland ecosystem characterized by wet, spongy, poorly drained peat-rich soil. Bogs can be divided into three types: (1) typical bogs of cool regions, dominated by the growth of bog mosses—sphagnums (mosses of the genus Sphagnum)—and heaths, particularly leatherleaf (Chamaedaphne); (2)
- bog (Slavic religion)
Slavic religion: Folk conceptions: These forms are: bog (“god”); sporysh, anciently an edible herb, today a stalk of grain with two ears, a symbol of abundance; ray (“paradise”); and dobro (“the good”). The word bog is an Indo-Iranian word signifying riches, abundance, and good fortune. Sporysh symbolizes the same concept. In Iranian…
- bog asphodel (plant)
asphodel: Bog asphodel (Narthecium ossifragum), of the family Nartheciaceae (order Dioscoreales), is a small herb growing in boggy places in Great Britain with rigid narrow leaves and a stem bearing a raceme of small golden yellow flowers. Members of the genus Triantha (family Tofieldiaceae; order Alismatales)…
- bog birch (tree)
birch: Major species: Bog birch (B. glandulosa) of North America, also called tundra dwarf birch or resin birch, and dwarf birch, or dwarf Arctic birch (B. nana), native to most far northern areas of the world, are small alpine and tundra shrubs commonly known as ground birch. Both…
- bog body (anthropology)
bog body, any of several hundred variously preserved human remains found in natural peat bogs, mostly in northern and western Europe but also elsewhere. Such bogs are anaerobic (oxygen-free) environments, a condition that prevents decay. They are also heavy with tannins, a group of naturally
- bog club moss (plant genus)
club moss: Major genera and species: Members of the genus Lycopodiella are commonly known as bog club mosses. They grow in bogs and other wetland habitats nearly worldwide, and many species are native to tropical areas of the Americas.
- bog iron ore (mineral)
bog iron ore, Iron ore consisting of hydrated iron oxide minerals such as limonite and goethite formed by precipitation of groundwater flowing into wetlands. Bacterial action contributes to formation of the ore. Economically useful deposits can regrow within 20 years after harvesting. Bog iron was
- bog kalmia (shrub)
kalmia: …pale laurel, bog laurel, or bog kalmia.
- bog Labrador tea (plant)
Labrador tea: Bog Labrador tea (R. groenlandicum) is found in cold boggy areas and grows to about 1 metre (3 feet) high. The fragrant leaves have long been used by native peoples for tea and are also used in traditional herbal medicines. The twigs are reddish. The…
- bog laurel (shrub)
kalmia: …pale laurel, bog laurel, or bog kalmia.
- bog manganese (mineralogy)
wad, black and earthy substance that consists mainly of hydrated manganese oxides; it is an important ore of manganese. It varies considerably in chemical composition and contains different impurities, often in large amounts. Wad is very soft, readily soils the fingers, and may be considered to be
- bog moss (plant)
peat moss, (genus Sphagnum), genus of more than 300 species of moss (division Bryophyta). The taxonomy of Sphagnum species has been controversial, and various botanists accept quite different numbers of species. Peat mosses form dense clumps around ponds, in swamps and bogs, on moist acidic cliffs,
- bog myrtle (plant)
Myricaceae: …within the family include the sweet gale, or bog myrtle (Myrica gale), a shrub of wet areas with resinous leaves useful in medicines; the wax myrtle, or candleberry (M. cerifera), a tall shrub or small tree growing to about 11 metres (35 feet); and bayberry (M. pennsylvanica), which yields a…
- bog onion (plant)
jack-in-the-pulpit, (species Arisaema triphyllum), a North American plant of the arum family (Araceae), noted for the unusual shape of its flower. The plant is native to wet woodlands and thickets from Nova Scotia to Minnesota and southward to Florida and Texas. It is a stoutish perennial, 1 to 2.5
- bog orchid (plant, genus Platanthera)
rein orchid, (genus Platanthera), genus of about 100 species of terrestrial orchids (family Orchidaceae) found throughout much of the Northern Hemisphere. Rein orchids grow in grasslands, bogs, forests, and sand dunes in subtropical and warm temperate areas. Rein orchids are perennial plants and
- bog pink (plant)
dragon’s-mouth, (Arethusa bulbosa), species of terrestrial orchid (family Orchidaceae) found only in North American bogs. The plant is the only species in the genus Arethusa. The dragon’s-mouth orchid is a perennial plant with a small corm and a single grasslike leaf. It produces a solitary reddish
- bog rosemary (plant)
bog rosemary, (Andromeda polifolia), low evergreen shrub of the heath family (Ericaceae). The plant is native to bogs in northeastern North America, northern and central Europe, and northern Asia. Several ornamental cultivars have been developed, though the plant requires cool moist conditions and
- bog yellow cress (plant)
yellow cress: The marsh cress, or bog yellow cress (R. palustris), is an annual plant that has naturalized in marshy areas throughout the world. Great yellow cress (R. amphibia) and creeping yellow cress (R. sylvestris) are invasive species in North America. Lakecress (R. aquatica) is a slow-growing perennial…
- Bogalusa (Louisiana, United States)
Bogalusa, city, Washington parish, southeastern Louisiana, U.S., at the northern terminus of the Pearl River Navigation Canal, 60 miles (97 km) north-northeast of New Orleans, near the Mississippi border. Founded in 1906 by the Great Southern Lumber Company and named for a local creek called Bogue
- Bogan of Bogan, Mrs. (Scottish songwriter)
Carolina Nairne, Baroness Nairne was a Scottish songwriter and laureate of Jacobitism, who wrote “Charlie Is My Darling,” “The Hundred Pipers,” “The Land o’ the Leal,” and “Will Ye No’ Come Back Again?” The daughter of a Jacobite laird, Laurence Oliphant, who was exiled (1745–63), she followed
- Bogan, Louise (American poet and literary critic)
Louise Bogan was an American poet and literary critic who served as poetry critic for The New Yorker from 1931 until 1969. Bogan was born in a mill town, where her father was a clerk in a pulp mill. Her mother was given to having extramarital affairs and to disappearing for lengthy periods. The
- Boganda, Barthélemy (Central African politician)
Barthélemy Boganda was the major nationalist leader of the Central African Republic (formerly Ubangi-Shari) in the critical decolonization period of the 1950s. His strong popular support was unmatched by that of any other political figure in the four colonies of French Equatorial Africa. Stridently
- Bogarde, Sir Dirk (British actor)
Sir Dirk Bogarde was an English actor who was one of Great Britain’s most popular leading men in the 1950s. Bogarde was the son of a Dutch-born art critic. He made his stage debut in 1939 and won a film contract from the Rank studios after World War II. He gained attention for his role in the light
- Bogardus, James (American inventor)
James Bogardus was an inventor and builder who popularized cast-iron construction, which was commonly used in American industrial and commercial building from 1850 to 1880. He did so by shipping prefabricated sections from his factory in New York City to construction sites, and he further
- Bogart, Humphrey (American actor)
Humphrey Bogart was an American actor who became a preeminent motion picture “tough guy” and was a top box-office attraction during the 1940s and ’50s. In his performances, he projected the image of a worldly-wise individualistic adventurer with a touch of idealism hidden beneath a hardened
- Bogart, Humphrey DeForest (American actor)
Humphrey Bogart was an American actor who became a preeminent motion picture “tough guy” and was a top box-office attraction during the 1940s and ’50s. In his performances, he projected the image of a worldly-wise individualistic adventurer with a touch of idealism hidden beneath a hardened
- Bogart, Neil (American businessman)
Casablanca Records: …and it was run by Neil Bogart (who had changed his name from Bogatz). The son of a Brooklyn postal worker, he reinvented himself via New York’s School of the Performing Arts, had a minor recording hit as Neil Scott, and served an apprenticeship in payola as a record label…
- bogatyr (literature)
bogatyr, one of a group of heroes of the Russian folk epics known as byliny. The duty of the bogatyrs was to protect the Russian land against foreign invaders, especially the Tatars. The most prominent of the bogatyrs was Ilya of Murom, about whom Nikolay Karamzin wrote the poem “Ilya Muromets”
- Bogatyrs (painting by Vasnetsov)
Viktor Mikhaylovich Vasnetsov: …of his most important paintings—Bogatyrs (1898), on which he worked for more than a decade, with countless preparatory studies and sketches—had just this fate is quite characteristic. His careful approach resulted in the transformation of his paintings into pseudohistorical fantasies based on themes of Russian history.
- Bogaz (valley, Greece)
Vale of Tempe, narrow valley between the southern Olympus (Modern Greek: Ólympos) and northern Ossa (Kíssavos or Óssa) massifs of northeastern Thessaly (Thessalía), Greece. The valley is lined by cliffs that rise to 1,650 feet (500 m) on the south; in places it is only 90 to 165 feet (27 to 50 m)
- Bogaziçi (strait, Turkey)
Bosporus, strait (boğaz, “throat”) uniting the Black Sea and the Sea of Marmara and separating parts of Asian Turkey (Anatolia) from European Turkey. The Bosporus is 19 miles (30 km) long and has a maximum width of 2.3 miles (3.7 km) at the northern entrance and a minimum width of 2,450 feet (750
- Boğaziçi Bridge (bridge, Istanbul, Turkey)
Bosporus: The first, the Boğaziçi (Bosporus I) Bridge, was completed in 1973 and has a main span of 3,524 feet (1,074 metres). The second bridge, the Fatih Sultan Mehmed (Bosporus II), was completed in 1988 and has a main span of 3,576 feet (1,090 metres). The third, the Yavuz Sultan…
- Boğazkale (Turkey)
Boğazköy, village, north-central Turkey. Located 17 miles (27 km) northwest of Yozgat, it is the site of the archaeological remains of Hattusas (Hattusa, Hattusha, or Khattusas), the ancient capital of the Hittites, who established a powerful empire in Anatolia and northern Syria in the 2nd
- Boǧazkesen (castle, Istanbul, Turkey)
Istanbul: Constantinople of Istanbul: …narrowest point; this fortress, called Rumelihisarı, still forms one of the principal landmarks of the straits. The siege of the city began in April 1453. The Turks had not only overwhelming numerical superiority but also cannon that breached the ancient walls. The Golden Horn was protected by a chain, but…
- Boğazköy (Turkey)
Boğazköy, village, north-central Turkey. Located 17 miles (27 km) northwest of Yozgat, it is the site of the archaeological remains of Hattusas (Hattusa, Hattusha, or Khattusas), the ancient capital of the Hittites, who established a powerful empire in Anatolia and northern Syria in the 2nd
- bogbean (plant)
Menyanthaceae: Buckbean, or bogbean (Menyanthes trifoliata), is the sole member of the genus Menyanthes and is native to North America. Buckbean inhabits wet soils. It has bitter-tasting leaves and is used in folk medicine. The plant bears white or pink flowers that produce hard, light brown…
- Bogd Gegeen Khan (Mongolian head of state)
Bogd Gegeen Khan was the "Living Buddha" of the Yellow Hat (Dge-lugs-pa) sect. In 1911 he proclaimed Mongolia independent of China, though true independence was not achieved until 1921. He remained head of state until
- Bogd Gegen (Mongol religious leader)
Mongolia: Revival of Buddhism: …in 1640 with the title Javzandamba khutagt and proclaimed Öndör Geegen (“High Enlightened One”) or Bogd Geegen (“Holy Enlightened One”). The significance of this is underlined by the fact that, as soon as the Manchu controlled Mongolia, they ruled that no man of the lineage of Genghis Khan could be…
- Bogd Khan (Mongolian head of state)
Bogd Gegeen Khan was the "Living Buddha" of the Yellow Hat (Dge-lugs-pa) sect. In 1911 he proclaimed Mongolia independent of China, though true independence was not achieved until 1921. He remained head of state until
- Bogd Khan Mountain National Park (national park, Mongolia)
Yellowstone National Park: …predated by the creation of Bogd Khan Mountain National Park in Mongolia, which may date from as early as 1778. Yellowstone was designated a UNESCO biosphere reserve in 1976 and a World Heritage site in 1978. The park, which forms a squarelike rectangle with an irregular eastern side, is 63…
- Bogda Mountains (mountains, Asia)
Tien Shan: Physiography: …to the north by the Bogda Mountains, with elevations of up to 17,864 feet (5,445 metres), and by the eastern extremity of the Tien Shan, the Karlik Mountains, which reach a maximum elevation of 16,158 feet (4,925 metres).
- Bogdan (prince of Moldavia)
Moldavia: …its independence under its prince, Bogdan. At its greatest extent, Moldavia included Bessarabia and was bounded on the north and northeast by the Dniester River, on the south by the Black Sea and Dobruja and Walachia, and on the west by Transylvania.
- Bogdan (historical region, Europe)
Moldavia, principality on the lower Danube River that joined Walachia to form the nation of Romania in 1859. Its name was taken from the Moldova River (now in Romania). It was founded in the first half of the 14th century by a group of Vlachs, led by Dragoș, who emigrated eastward from Maramureș in
- Bogdan III the One-Eyed (prince of Moldavia)
Moldavia: …however, his son and successor, Bogdan III the One-Eyed (reigned 1504–17), was compelled to pay tribute to the sultan. By the middle of the 16th century Moldavia had become an autonomous, tribute-paying vassal-state of the Ottoman Empire.
- Bogdan Mountain (mountain, Bulgaria)
Sredna Mountains: …(1,604 m), is that of Bogdan, a peak 17 miles (27 km) west of the town of Karlovo. The Topolnitsa and Stryama rivers are important north-south transportation routes.
- Bogdanovich, Ippolit Fyodorovich (Russian author)
Russian literature: Poetry: But Vasily Maykov and Ippolit Bogdanovich wrote amusing mock epics. Maykov’s Elisey; ili, razdrazhenny Vakkh (1769; “Elisei; or, Bacchus Enraged”) cleverly parodies a Russian translation of the Aeneid with a narrative in which the Greek pantheon directs whores, drunks, and other low-lifes. In Dushenka: drevnyaya povest v volnykh stikhakh…
- Bogdanovich, Peter (American film director)
Peter Bogdanovich was an American director, critic, and actor noted for his attempts to revitalize film genres of the 1930s and ’40s. (Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film preservation.) As a teenager, Bogdanovich studied acting with Stella Adler. He later appeared in small theatrical
- Bogert, Tim (American musician)
Jeff Beck: …Fudge members Carmine Appice and Tim Bogert, Beck released Beck, Bogert & Appice in 1973. After its negative reception the trio disbanded, and Beck embarked on a solo career. The critically acclaimed Blow by Blow (1975), produced by Beatles collaborator George Martin, featured an all-instrumental, jazz fusion approach in which…
- bogey (golf)
golf: Par golf: …many courses also have a bogey, which is defined as the score that a moderately good golfer would be expected to make. Both par and bogey are further defined as errorless play without flukes and under ordinary weather conditions, allowing two strokes on the putting green. Par is essentially an…
- bogeyman (legendary creature)
bogeyman, any of a variety of fictional and oftentimes folkloric monsters described in stories designed to frighten children. Tales of the bogeyman and various analogues have been used for centuries all across the world to influence children to behave as their parents command and to exercise
- Boggeragh Mountains (mountain range, Ireland)
Boggeragh Mountains, mountain range in west County Cork, Ireland, comprising the western end of the Boggeragh-Nagles anticline (upwarp of rock strata), a long line of hills running from County Kerry eastward to the Drum Hills of County Waterford. The Boggeragh Mountains are defined to the north by
- Boggle (word game)
puzzle: Puzzle genres: Boggle, Scrabble, and Words with Friends are all games based on word puzzles.
- Boggs, Hale (American politician)
Warren Commission: House of Representatives, Hale Boggs of Louisiana and Gerald Ford of Michigan; and two private citizens, Allen W. Dulles, former director of the Central Intelligence Agency, and John J. McCloy, former president of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
- Boggs, Phil (American diver)
Phil Boggs was an American diver who won a gold medal in springboard diving at the 1976 Olympic Games in Montreal. After competing at Florida State University (1967–71), Boggs enlisted in the U.S. Air Force. While in the service, he continued diving, winning the world springboard championships in
- Boggs, Wade (American baseball player)
Tampa Bay Rays: …signed future Hall of Famer Wade Boggs, who grew up in Tampa and further spurred fan interest in the new team. However, the Devil Rays franchise did not have an auspicious beginning: it posted losing records in each of its first 10 seasons and finished last in its division in…
- Boggy Peak (mountain, Antigua and Barbuda)
Antigua and Barbuda: Land: …metres) at Mount Obama (formerly Boggy Peak). An absence of mountains and forests distinguishes Antigua from the other Leeward Islands. Because there are no rivers and few springs, droughts occur despite a mean annual rainfall of some 40 inches (1,000 mm). The average January temperature is around 77 °F (25…
- Boghar (Algeria)
Ksar el-Boukhari: …the village and fort of Boghar (Balcon du Sud), a strategic command post. Pop. (1998) 61,687; (2008) 59,634.
- Boghari (Algeria)
Ksar el-Boukhari, town, north-central Algeria. Lying along the Chelif River at the junction of the High Plateau (Hauts Plateaux) region and the Atlas Mountains, the town is almost totally surrounded by wooded mountain ridges. The old walled quarter (ksar) is on a hill overlooking the modern town.
- Boghazkeui (Turkey)
Boğazköy, village, north-central Turkey. Located 17 miles (27 km) northwest of Yozgat, it is the site of the archaeological remains of Hattusas (Hattusa, Hattusha, or Khattusas), the ancient capital of the Hittites, who established a powerful empire in Anatolia and northern Syria in the 2nd
- boghead coal (mineral)
torbanite, mineral substance intermediate between oil shale and coal. Whereas destructive distillation of coals produces compounds of carbon and hydrogen with carbon atoms linked in six-membered rings, torbanite produces paraffinic and olefinic hydrocarbons (compounds with carbon linked in chains).
- bogie (railway mechanics)
railroad: The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad: …track, and a swiveling leading truck guided them into tight curves. On the Camden and Amboy Railroad, another pioneering line, the engineer John Jervis invented the T- cross-section rail that greatly cheapened and simplified the laying of track when combined with the wooden crosstie also first introduced in the United…
- Bogle, Bob (American musician)
the Ventures: January 22, 2022, Tacoma), bassist Bob Bogle (b. January 16, 1934, Portland, Oregon—d. June 14, 2009, Vancouver, Washington), guitarist Nokie Edwards (b. May 9, 1935, Lahoma, Oklahoma—d. March 12, 2018, Yuma, Arizona), drummer Mel Taylor (b. September 24, 1933, New York, New York—d. August 11, 1996, Tarzana, California), and drummers…
- Bogle, Robert Lenard (American musician)
the Ventures: January 22, 2022, Tacoma), bassist Bob Bogle (b. January 16, 1934, Portland, Oregon—d. June 14, 2009, Vancouver, Washington), guitarist Nokie Edwards (b. May 9, 1935, Lahoma, Oklahoma—d. March 12, 2018, Yuma, Arizona), drummer Mel Taylor (b. September 24, 1933, New York, New York—d. August 11, 1996, Tarzana, California), and drummers…
- Bognor Regis (England, United Kingdom)
Bognor Regis, parish, Arun district, administrative county of West Sussex, historic county of Sussex, southern England. It is situated on the English Channel, south-southwest of London. The name Regis, meaning “King’s,” commemorates George V’s convalescence there in 1929. The resort, which has
- Bogolyubsky, Andrey Yuryevich (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
- Bogomil (religious sect)
Bogomil, member of a dualist religious sect that flourished in the Balkans between the 10th and 15th centuries. It arose in Bulgaria toward the middle of the 10th century from a fusion of dualistic, neo-Manichaean doctrines imported especially from the Paulicians, a sect of Armenia and Asia Minor,
- Bogong, Mount (mountain, Victoria, Australia)
Mount Bogong, highest peak (6,516 feet [1,986 m]) of Victoria, Australia. It is in the Australian Alps, 150 miles (240 km) northeast of Melbourne. Well known for winter sports, the peak derived its name from an Aboriginal word meaning “high plains.” Bogong township was established there during the
- Bogor (Indonesia)
Bogor, kota (city), West Java (Jawa Barat) propinsi (or provinsi; province), Indonesia. It lies at an elevation of 870 feet (265 metres) above sea level in the foothills of Mounts Gede and Salak Satu, about 25 miles (40 km) south of Jakarta. The city, established by the Dutch in 1745, is famous for
- Bogor Botanical Gardens (garden, Bogor, Indonesia)
Indonesia Botanical Gardens, tropical garden in Bogor, West Java, Indonesia. It is renowned for its research on regional flora. The 215-acre (87-hectare) site was first used by the Dutch for introducing tropical plants from other parts of the world into the region. In 1817 it was converted into a
- Bogoraz, Vladimir Germanovich (Soviet anthropologist)
Vladimir Germanovich Bogoraz was a Russian anthropologist whose study of the Chukchi people of northeastern Siberia ranks among the classic works of ethnography. Arrested in 1886 for activities with the revolutionary Narodnaya Volya (“People’s Will”) political party, Bogoraz was exiled to the
- Bogorodica Ljeviška, church of (church, Prizren, Kosovo)
Prizren: The church of Bogorodica Ljeviška (1306–07), turned into a mosque by the Turks, was restored in 1950 to reveal large and beautiful frescoes. The Sinan Paša Mosque (1615) is built of marble taken from the 14th-century monastery of Michael the Archangel. Many buildings and cultural treasures, including Bogorodica…
- Bogorodsk (Russia)
Noginsk, city, Moscow oblast (region), western Russia, on the Klyazma River east of Moscow. Originally Yamskaya village, it became the town of Bogorodsk in 1781 and was renamed Noginsk in 1930. It is one of the largest Russian textile centres; cotton forms most of its production. Pop. (2006 est.)
- Bogorodskoye (Russia)
Amur River: Physiography: Near Bogorodskoye the hollow is closed in by mountains, and the river flows out onto a low-lying plain, where the Amgun, the last of its important tributaries, joins the Amur on its left bank. It enters the sea through a wide, bell-shaped estuary, which is about…
- Bogotá (national capital, Colombia)
Bogotá, capital of Colombia. It lies in central Colombia in a fertile upland basin 8,660 feet (2,640 metres) above sea level in the Cordillera Oriental of the Northern Andes Mountains. Bogotá occupies a sloping plain at the base of two mountains, Guadalupe and Monserrate, upon whose crests stand
- Bogotá Museum of Colonial Art (museum, Bogotá, Colombia)
Colombia: Cultural institutions: …extraordinarily skilled craftsmen, whereas the Bogotá Museum of Colonial Art has a rich collection of criollo (Creole) religious sculpture and painting. The National Museum displays treasures and relics dating from prehistoric times to the present and possesses various collections of Colombian painting and sculpture. The July 20 Museum contains documents…
- Bogotá, Charter of (South American history)
international agreement: …Organization of American States (Charter of Bogotá), which established the organization in 1948. The constitution of an international organization may be part of a wider multilateral treaty. The Treaty of Versailles (1919), for example, contained in Part I the Covenant of the League of Nations and in Part XIII…
- Bogotá, D.C. (national capital, Colombia)
Bogotá, capital of Colombia. It lies in central Colombia in a fertile upland basin 8,660 feet (2,640 metres) above sea level in the Cordillera Oriental of the Northern Andes Mountains. Bogotá occupies a sloping plain at the base of two mountains, Guadalupe and Monserrate, upon whose crests stand
- Bogotá, Declaration of (South American history)
Alfredo Poveda Burbano: 8, 1978, signed the Declaration of Bogotá, which restated the intentions of the Andean group to seek further economic integration. He ensured the orderly transfer of power to the democratically elected regime of Jaime Roldós Aguilera by insisting repeatedly that the armed forces’ decision to surrender power to the…
- Bogotá, Sabana de (savanna, Colombia)
Colombia: Relief: …the savanna area called the Sabana de Bogotá. Farther northeast beyond the deep canyons cut by the Chicamocha River and its tributaries, the Cordillera Oriental culminates in the towering Mount Cocuy (Sierra Nevada del Cocuy), which rises to 18,022 feet (5,493 metres). Beyond this point, near Pamplona, the cordillera splits…
- Bogra (Bangladesh)
Bogra, city, northwestern Bangladesh. It lies on the west bank of the Karatoya River, which is a tributary of the Jamuna River (the name of the Brahmaputra River in Bangladesh). Easy accessibility by road and railway makes Bogra a commercial centre for the southern Barind region, between the upper
- Bogra, Mohammad Ali (prime minister of Pakistan)
Pakistan: Political decline and bureaucratic ascendancy: Although another Bengali, Muhammad Ali Bogra, replaced Nazimuddin, there was no ignoring the fact that the viceregal tradition was continuing to dominate Pakistani political life and that Ghulam Muhammad, a bureaucrat and never truly a politician, with others like him, controlled Pakistan’s destiny.
- Bogrov, Dmitry (Russian assassin)
Pyotr Arkadyevich Stolypin: ], 1911) by Dmitry Bogrov, a revolutionary who had used his police connections to gain admittance to the theatre.
- Bogside, Battle of (Northern Ireland history)
the Troubles: Civil rights activism, the Battle of Bogside, and the arrival of the British army: …that became known as the Battle of Bogside (after the Catholic area in which the confrontation occurred) stemmed from the escalating clash between nationalists and the RUC, which was acting as a buffer between loyalist marchers and Catholic residents of the area. Rioting in support of the nationalists then erupted…
- Bogud (king of Mauretania)
Bocchus II: …another son of Bocchus I, Bogud, succeeded their father to the rule of Mauretania about 50 bc. Bocchus ruled the part east of the Mulucha River (present-day Moulouya River in Morocco), Bogud the part west of it. They supported Julius Caesar against the Pompeians and King Juba I in Africa…
- Bogue, British Supplementary Treaty of the (China-United Kingdom [1843])
Qiying: 8, 1843, Qiying signed the British Supplementary Treaty of the Bogue (Humen), which governed the execution of the Treaty of Nanjing and granted the British the right of extraterritoriality; i.e., the right to try British subjects by British courts set up on Chinese soil. The Bogue Treaty also granted the…
- Bogues, Muggsy (American basketball player)
New Orleans Pelicans: 60-metre) point guard Muggsy Bogues and sharpshooter Dell Curry, but, like most expansion teams, they won few of their games. The team drafted forward Larry Johnson in 1991 and centre Alonzo Mourning in 1992, and the pair helped Charlotte to its first playoff appearance (and postseason series win)…