- Barnes, Albert C. (American inventor and art collector)
Albert C. Barnes was an American inventor of the antiseptic Argyrol (a mild silver protein anti-infective compound for mucous membrane tissues) and a noted art collector, whose collection is a part of the Barnes Foundation Galleries. Barnes grew up in poverty in South Philadelphia but managed to
- Barnes, Albert Coombs (American inventor and art collector)
Albert C. Barnes was an American inventor of the antiseptic Argyrol (a mild silver protein anti-infective compound for mucous membrane tissues) and a noted art collector, whose collection is a part of the Barnes Foundation Galleries. Barnes grew up in poverty in South Philadelphia but managed to
- Barnes, Barnabe (English poet)
Barnabe Barnes was an Elizabethan poet, one of the Elizabethan sonneteers and the author of Parthenophil and Parthenophe. Barnes was the son of Richard Barnes, bishop of Durham. He entered Brasenose College, Oxford, in 1586 but took no degree; in 1591 he joined the expedition to Normandy led by the
- Barnes, Bucky (fictional character)
Captain America: Origins in the Golden Age: …a kid sidekick—plucky regimental mascot Bucky Barnes—and embarks on a career of enthusiastic Nazi-bashing.
- Barnes, Derrick (American author)
Derrick Barnes is an American author of award-winning books for children and young adults. His picture book Crown: An Ode to the Fresh Cut (2017) won the Kirkus Prize for young readers’ literature and was named a Newbery Honor Book and a Coretta Scott King Honor Book in 2018. Barnes was reared in
- Barnes, Djuna (American author)
Djuna Barnes was an avant-garde American writer who was a well-known figure in the Parisian literary scene of the 1920s and ’30s. Initially educated privately by her father and grandmother, Barnes attended the Pratt Institute and the Art Students League and worked as an artist and journalist. From
- Barnes, Ernest William (British bishop)
Ernest William Barnes was a controversial Anglican bishop of Birmingham, a leader in the Church of England modernist movement. Barnes was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he subsequently became fellow, lecturer in mathematics, and tutor. He was ordained in 1903. By 1915, when he was
- Barnes, Fred (American journalist)
The Weekly Standard: …in 1995 by William Kristol, Fred Barnes, and John Podhoretz with financial backing from Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation. One of the young writers on the staff of the magazine in 1995 was American conservative pundit and popular Fox News talk show host Tucker Carlson. The Weekly Standard largely reflected the…
- Barnes, George Nicoll (British labor leader)
George Nicoll Barnes was a trade-union leader, socialist, a founder (1900) and chairman (1910) of the British Labour Party, and member of David Lloyd George’s coalition ministry during World War I. A clerk in a jute mill at the age of 11, Barnes later became an engineer and was assistant secretary
- Barnes, Irene (American sociologist)
Conrad Taeuber and Irene Barnes Taeuber: After he married Irene Barnes, they collaborated on their work in the field of demography and on two publications considered standard works in the field.
- Barnes, Jake (fictional character)
Jake Barnes, fictional character, the narrator of Ernest Hemingway’s novel The Sun Also Rises (1926). An expatriate American living in Paris in the 1920s, Jake works as a newspaper correspondent. A wound suffered in the war has rendered him impotent and unable to consummate his love for Lady Brett
- Barnes, Julian (British author and critic)
Julian Barnes is a British critic and author of inventive and intellectual novels about obsessed characters curious about the past. Barnes attended Magdalen College, Oxford (B.A., 1968), and began contributing reviews to the Times Literary Supplement in the 1970s while publishing thrillers under
- Barnes, Julian Patrick (British author and critic)
Julian Barnes is a British critic and author of inventive and intellectual novels about obsessed characters curious about the past. Barnes attended Magdalen College, Oxford (B.A., 1968), and began contributing reviews to the Times Literary Supplement in the 1970s while publishing thrillers under
- Barnes, Pancho (American aviator)
Pancho Barnes was an aviator and movie stunt pilot, one of the first American women to establish a reputation and a business in the field of aviation. (Read Orville Wright’s 1929 biography of his brother, Wilbur.) Florence Lowe was reared in an atmosphere of wealth and privilege on an estate in San
- Barnes, Robert (English clergyman)
Robert Barnes was an English Lutheran who was martyred after being used by King Henry VIII to gain support for his antipapal campaign in England. Barnes, a prior of the Austin Friars at Cambridge, was early influenced by reformist views and ruined a promising academic career when on Christmas Eve,
- Barnes, Thomas (British journalist)
Thomas Barnes was a British journalist who as editor of The Times for many years established its reputation and founded a tradition of independent journalism. The son of a solicitor, Barnes was educated at Christ’s Hospital and at Pembroke College, Cambridge. After studying in the chambers of
- Barnes, Tracy (American aeronaut)
balloon flight: Modern hot-air balloons: American aeronaut Tracy Barnes adapted a venting system used in parachutes to make the most important advance in safety and control of hot-air balloons since the rip panel. Barnes’s parachute top has also been used in gas balloons. His novel three-corner basket and three-point suspension distinguish his…
- Barnes, William (English poet)
William Barnes was an English dialect poet whose work gives a vivid picture of the life and labour of rural southwestern England and includes some moving expressions of loss and grief, such as “The Wife A-Lost” and “Woak Hill.” He was also a gifted philologist, and his linguistic theories as well
- Barnet (borough, London, United Kingdom)
Barnet, outer borough of London, England, on the northwestern perimeter of the metropolis. The borough lies mostly within the historic county of Middlesex, but many of its northern districts (including New Barnet and East Barnet) belong historically to Hertfordshire. The present borough was created
- Barnet, Battle of (English history)
Battle of Barnet, (April 14, 1471), in the English Wars of the Roses, a momentous victory for the Yorkist king Edward IV over his Lancastrian opponents, the adherents of Henry VI. It was fought around Hadley Green, now in East Barnet, just north of London, on Easter Day. Edward, in power since
- Barnet, Charles Daly (American musician)
Charlie Barnet was an American band leader and saxophonist of the swing jazz era. Born into a wealthy family, Barnet rejected their urging that he become a corporate lawyer and instead turned to music. He led his first band at age 16, on a transatlantic liner, and eventually made 22 such crossings;
- Barnet, Charlie (American musician)
Charlie Barnet was an American band leader and saxophonist of the swing jazz era. Born into a wealthy family, Barnet rejected their urging that he become a corporate lawyer and instead turned to music. He led his first band at age 16, on a transatlantic liner, and eventually made 22 such crossings;
- Barnet, Miguel (Cuban writer)
Miguel Barnet is a novelist, poet, ethnographer, and expert on Afro-Cuban culture. Barnet came from a prominent Cuban family of Catalan descent. He spent part of his childhood in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S., and was fluent in English. Though not a member of the Communist Party, he remained in Cuba,
- Barnets århundrede (work by Key)
Ellen Key: Barnets århundrade (1900; The Century of the Child, 1909) made her world famous. This book and numerous other publications concerning the issues of marriage, motherhood, and family life were translated into many languages. In 1903 she started lecture tours abroad, particularly in Germany. She also propagated her ideas…
- Barnett Shale (shale basin, Texas, United States)
shale gas: Shale gas resources of the United States: These include the Barnett Shale, around Dallas–Fort Worth, Texas; the Fayetteville Shale, mainly in northern Arkansas; the Woodford Shale, mainly in Oklahoma; and the Haynesville Shale, straddling the Texas-Louisiana state line. The Barnett Shale was the proving ground of horizontal drilling and fracking starting in the 1990s; more…
- Barnett, Gary (American football coach)
Gary Barnett is an American collegiate gridiron football coach whose on-field successes were marred by off-field controversies. Barnett attended the University of Missouri at Columbia, where he played wide receiver on the football team; he earned a bachelor’s degree in 1969. He remained at
- Barnett, Samuel A. (British clergyman)
Samuel A. Barnett was an Anglican priest and social reformer who founded building programs and cultural centres (notably Toynbee Hall, 1884, which Barnett served as its first warden) in London’s impoverished East End. In his teaching and writings he advanced a doctrine of Christian socialism.
- Barnett, Samuel Augustus (British clergyman)
Samuel A. Barnett was an Anglican priest and social reformer who founded building programs and cultural centres (notably Toynbee Hall, 1884, which Barnett served as its first warden) in London’s impoverished East End. In his teaching and writings he advanced a doctrine of Christian socialism.
- Barneville, Marie-Catherine Le Jumel de, Countess d’Aulnoy (French author)
Marie-Catherine Le Jumel de Barneville, countess d’Aulnoy was a writer of fairy tales and of novels of court intrigue, whose personal intrigues were commensurate with those described in her books. Shortly after her marriage as a young girl in 1666, Marie d’Aulnoy conspired with her mother and their
- Barney’s Version (novel by Richler)
Canadian literature: Fiction: …Gursky Was Here (1989), and Barney’s Version (1997) satirize the condition and hypocrisy of modern society through black humour.
- Barney’s Version (film by Lewis [2010])
Paul Giamatti: …character in the dark comedy Barney’s Version (2010), based on Mordecai Richler’s novel.
- Barney, Matthew (American artist)
Matthew Barney is an American sculptor and video artist whose five-part Cremaster film cycle was praised for its inventiveness. Some art critics consider him one of the most significant artists of his generation. Following his graduation from Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut (B.A., 1989),
- Barney, Natalie (American-born literary figure)
Natalie Barney was an American-born literary figure and writer who was noted for her international salon, her friendships with several writers, and her unabashed lesbianism. Barney’s mother was Alice Pike Barney, a portrait painter, her father an industrialist. At age 21, she inherited a fortune
- Barney, Natalie Clifford (American-born literary figure)
Natalie Barney was an American-born literary figure and writer who was noted for her international salon, her friendships with several writers, and her unabashed lesbianism. Barney’s mother was Alice Pike Barney, a portrait painter, her father an industrialist. At age 21, she inherited a fortune
- Barney, Nora Stanton Blatch (American civil engineer and architect)
Nora Stanton Blatch Barney was an American civil engineer, architect, and suffragist whose professional and political activities built on her family’s tradition of women leaders. Nora Stanton Blatch was the daughter of Harriot Stanton Blatch and the granddaughter of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, both of
- Barnī, Ẕiyāʾ al-Dīn (Muslim historian)
Ẕiyāʾ al-Dīn Baranī was the first known Muslim to write a history of India. He resided for 17 years at Delhi as nadim (boon companion) of Sultan Muḥammad ibn Tughluq. Using mainly hearsay evidence and his personal experiences at court, Baranī in 1357 wrote the Tārīkh-e Fīrūz Shāhī (“History of
- Barnsley (England, United Kingdom)
Barnsley, town and metropolitan borough, metropolitan county of South Yorkshire, historic county of Yorkshire, northern England. The borough encompasses in addition to Barnsley a number of smaller towns, including Cudworth, Darton, Wombwell, and Penistone, and some open countryside, including a
- Barnsley (English football club)
Viv Anderson: …he was a player/manager for Barnsley (1993–94) and a player/assistant coach for Middlesbrough (1994–2001). He was awarded the Member of the British Empire (MBE) in 1999, and in 2004 he was inducted into the National Football Museum Hall of Fame.
- Barnsley (district, England, United Kingdom)
Barnsley: metropolitan borough, metropolitan county of South Yorkshire, historic county of Yorkshire, northern England. The borough encompasses in addition to Barnsley a number of smaller towns, including Cudworth, Darton, Wombwell, and Penistone, and some open countryside, including a section of the Pennines.
- Barnsley family (English craftsmen)
furniture: 19th century: …as Ernest Gimson and the Barnsley family who, working with a few assistants, produced small quantities of high-quality handmade furniture, the craftsmanship of which has never been rivalled. The example of Morris and his followers was so widely copied on the Continent that many people believe modern furniture design originated…
- Barnstable (county, Massachusetts, United States)
Barnstable, county, southeastern Massachusetts, U.S. It is bounded by Cape Cod Bay to the north, the Atlantic Ocean to the east, Nantucket Sound to the south, Vineyard Sound to the southwest, and Buzzards Bay to the west. The county comprises the whole of Cape Cod and its satellite islands,
- Barnstable (Massachusetts, United States)
Barnstable, city, Barnstable county, southeastern Massachusetts, U.S. It is situated between Cape Cod Bay and Nantucket Sound, on the “biceps” of Cape Cod. It was settled in 1638 by farmers who were attracted to the site by salt hay found in the surrounding marshes, and in 1685 it was designated
- Barnstable, Town of (Massachusetts, United States)
Barnstable, city, Barnstable county, southeastern Massachusetts, U.S. It is situated between Cape Cod Bay and Nantucket Sound, on the “biceps” of Cape Cod. It was settled in 1638 by farmers who were attracted to the site by salt hay found in the surrounding marshes, and in 1685 it was designated
- Barnstaple (England, United Kingdom)
Barnstaple, town (parish), North Devon district, administrative and historic county of Devon, southwestern England. It lies on the north bank of the Taw estuary, about 10 miles (16 km) from the Bristol Channel, and is the administrative centre of the district. The Taw is spanned there by a
- barnstorming (aviation)
stunt flying, the performance of aerial feats requiring great skill or daring. (Read Orville Wright’s 1929 biography of his brother, Wilbur.) Stunt flying as a generic term may include barnstorming (see below), crazy flying (the performance of comedic aerial routines), or any spectacular or unusual
- Barnum & Bailey Circus
Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus: Beginnings: Barnum & Bailey: On a parallel track, in the early 1870s, James A. Bailey became a partner in the circus of which James E. Cooper was the principal owner. From 1876 to 1878 Cooper, Bailey and Co.’s Great International Circus traveled abroad, from Australia to…
- Barnum Effect (psychology)
Barnum Effect, in psychology, the phenomenon that occurs when individuals believe that personality descriptions apply specifically to them (more so than to other people), despite the fact that the description is actually filled with information that applies to everyone. The effect means that people
- Barnum Museum (museum, Bridgeport, Connecticut, United States)
Bridgeport: The Barnum Museum exhibits colourful circus memorabilia. The much-publicized socialist mayor Jasper McLevy was elected there in 1933 to begin a 24-year administration. Bridgeport’s public monuments include a number of war memorials and the Perry Memorial Arch (1918); designed by architect Henry Bacon, it serves as…
- Barnum, P.T. (American showman)
P.T. Barnum was an American showman who employed sensational forms of presentation and publicity to popularize such amusements as the public museum, the musical concert, and the three-ring circus. In partnership with James A. Bailey, he made the American circus a popular and gigantic spectacle, the
- Barnum, Phineas Taylor (American showman)
P.T. Barnum was an American showman who employed sensational forms of presentation and publicity to popularize such amusements as the public museum, the musical concert, and the three-ring circus. In partnership with James A. Bailey, he made the American circus a popular and gigantic spectacle, the
- Barnwell (county, South Carolina, United States)
Barnwell, county, southern South Carolina, U.S. It consists of a low-lying region on the Coastal Plain bordered to the northeast by the South Fork Edisto River and to the southwest by the Savannah River border with Georgia. The county is also drained by the Salkehatchie River. Wetlands and pine
- Barnwell, John (American colonist)
Barnwell: …region of plantations named for John Barnwell, who early in the 18th century had led settlers in subduing a Tuscarora Indian uprising. In 1865, during the American Civil War, Federal troops occupied and set fire to the county seat, the town of Barnwell.
- barnyard grass (plant)
barnyard grass, (Echinochloa crus-galli), coarse tufted grass of the family Poaceae, a noxious agricultural weed. Although native to tropical Asia, barnyard grass can be found throughout the world, thriving in moist cultivated and waste areas. In many areas outside its native range, however, it is
- barnyard millet (plant)
barnyard grass, (Echinochloa crus-galli), coarse tufted grass of the family Poaceae, a noxious agricultural weed. Although native to tropical Asia, barnyard grass can be found throughout the world, thriving in moist cultivated and waste areas. In many areas outside its native range, however, it is
- Baro (Nigeria)
Baro, town and river port, Niger State, west central Nigeria, on the Niger River, 400 miles (650 km) from the sea. Originally a small village of the Nupe people, it was selected by the British as Nigeria’s link between rail and river transport; its solid bank—rare along the Lower Niger—could be
- Baro River (river, East Africa)
Ethiopia: Drainage: …Ethiopia), the Tekeze, and the Baro rivers. All three rivers flow west to the White Nile in South Sudan and Sudan. The second is the Rift Valley internal drainage system, composed of the Awash River, the Lakes Region, and the Omo River. The Awash flows northeast to the Denakil Plain…
- baro-otitis (physiology)
ear squeeze, effects of a difference in pressure between the internal ear spaces and the external ear canal. These effects may include severe pain, inflammation, bleeding, and rupture of the eardrum membrane. Underwater divers and airplane pilots are sometimes affected. The middle ear, the cavity
- Barocci, Federico (Italian painter)
Federico Barocci was a leading painter of the central Italian school in the last decades of the 16th century and an important precursor of the Baroque style. Barocci studied in Urbino with Battista Franco, a follower of Michelangelo’s maniera. Although he made two visits to Rome—one in about 1550
- Baroccio, Federico (Italian painter)
Federico Barocci was a leading painter of the central Italian school in the last decades of the 16th century and an important precursor of the Baroque style. Barocci studied in Urbino with Battista Franco, a follower of Michelangelo’s maniera. Although he made two visits to Rome—one in about 1550
- baroceptor (physiology)
Bainbridge reflex: Special pressure sensors called baroreceptors (or venoatrial stretch receptors) located in the right atrium of the heart detect increases in the volume and pressure of blood returned to the heart. These receptors transmit information along the vagus nerve (10th cranial nerve) to the central nervous system. This response results…
- barochory (botany)
fruit: Other forms of dispersal: Barochory, the dispersal of seeds and fruits by gravity alone, is demonstrated by the heavy fruits of horse chestnut.
- Barockscholastik (philosophy)
Scholasticism: Enduring features: …Scholasticism of the Renaissance (called Barockscholastik) and the Neoscholasticism of the 19th and 20th centuries, both of which were primarily interested in the work of Aquinas.
- baroclinic atmosphere (meteorology)
climate: Extratropical cyclones: …(sometimes referred to as a baroclinic zone). Cyclone development is initiated as a disturbance along the front, which distorts the front into the wavelike configuration (B; wave appearance). As the pressure within the disturbance continues to decrease, the disturbance assumes the appearance of a cyclone and forces poleward and equatorward…
- baroclinic field of mass (oceanography)
ocean current: Pressure gradients: This is the baroclinic field of mass, which leads to currents that vary with depth. The horizontal pressure gradient in the ocean is a combination of these two mass fields.
- baroclinic instability (meteorology)
atmosphere: Extratropical cyclones: …and occluded stages are called baroclinically unstable waves. Extratropical storm development is referred to as cyclogenesis. Rapid extratropical cyclone development, called explosive cyclogenesis (or, informally, bombogenesis), is often associated with major winter storms and occurs when surface pressure falls by more than about 24 millibars per day, and the storms…
- baroclinically unstable waves (meteorology)
atmosphere: Extratropical cyclones: …and occluded stages are called baroclinically unstable waves. Extratropical storm development is referred to as cyclogenesis. Rapid extratropical cyclone development, called explosive cyclogenesis (or, informally, bombogenesis), is often associated with major winter storms and occurs when surface pressure falls by more than about 24 millibars per day, and the storms…
- Baroco (syllogistic)
history of logic: Syllogisms: Cesare, Camestres, Festino, Baroco,
- Baroda (India)
Vadodara, city, east-central Gujarat state, west-central India. It is located on the Vishvamitra River about 60 miles (100 km) southeast of Ahmadabad. The earliest record of the city is in a grant or charter of 812 ce that mentions it as Vadapadraka, a hamlet attached to the town of Ankottaka. In
- Baroda Museum and Picture Gallery (museum, Vadodara, India)
Baroda Museum and Picture Gallery, museum and art gallery in Vadodara (Baroda), Gujarat state, India, founded by the maharaja Sayajirao Gaekwad III of Baroda in 1887. It comprises two buildings. The Baroda Museum, which was completed in 1894, houses a diverse collection that includes Indian
- Baroghil Pass (mountain pass, Asia)
Hindu Kush: Physiography: …the passes of Karambar and Baroghil (Barowghīl; 12,480 feet [3,804 metres]), the eastern Hindu Kush is not very high and has mountains that often take the form of rounded domes. Farther to the west the main ridge rises rapidly to Baba Tangi (21,368 feet [6,513 metres]) and becomes rugged, after…
- barograph (measurement instrument)
barometer: …over time is called a barograph. Though mercury barographs have been made, aneroid barographs are much more common. The motion of the aneroid capsule is magnified through levers to drive a recording pen. The pen traces a line on a graph that is usually wrapped around a cylinder driven by…
- Baroja, Pío (Spanish writer)
Pío Baroja was a Basque writer who is considered to be the foremost Spanish novelist of his generation. After receiving his medical degree, Baroja practiced medicine for a short time in a village in northern Spain, later returning to Madrid to work in the family bakery. As a member of the
- Baroja, Pío (Spanish writer)
Pío Baroja was a Basque writer who is considered to be the foremost Spanish novelist of his generation. After receiving his medical degree, Baroja practiced medicine for a short time in a village in northern Spain, later returning to Madrid to work in the family bakery. As a member of the
- Barom Reachea I (king of Cambodia)
Chan I: …the reign of his son, Barom Reachea I (1566–76). In 1553 Chan built a new palace at Lovek and was crowned again. Under his leadership, Cambodian forces attacked the Thai capital region during the period 1559–64; from then until his death there was an interlude of peace.
- barometer
barometer, device used to measure atmospheric pressure. Because atmospheric pressure changes with distance above or below sea level, a barometer can also be used to measure altitude. There are two main types of barometers: mercury and aneroid. In the mercury barometer, atmospheric pressure balances
- Barometer Rising (novel by MacLennan)
Hugh MacLennan: MacLennan’s first novel, Barometer Rising (1941), is a moral fable that uses as a background the actual explosion of a munitions ship that partly destroyed the city of Halifax in 1917. His later novels include Two Solitudes (1945), which explores Anglo-French relations in Canada; The Precipice (1948), a…
- barometric light
barometric light, luminous glow appearing in the vacuum above the mercury in a barometer tube when the tube is shaken, first noticed in 1675 by a French astronomer, Jean Picard. The electrical discharge takes place with a variety of rarefied gases trapped in the tube (neon glows with its
- barometric pressure
atmospheric pressure, force per unit area exerted by an atmospheric column (that is, the entire body of air above the specified area). Atmospheric pressure can be measured with a mercury barometer (hence the commonly used synonym barometric pressure), which indicates the height of a column of
- Barometric Pressure: Researches in Experimental Physiology (work by Bert)
Paul Bert: …recherches de physiologie expérimentale (1878; Barometric Pressure: Researches in Experimental Physiology, 1943) was of fundamental importance to aviation medicine during World War II and to aerospace research in general.
- baron (title)
baron, baron equivalentstitle of nobility, ranking below a viscount (or below a count in countries without viscounts). It is one of the five ranks of British nobility and peerage, which, in descending order, are duke, marquess, earl, viscount, and baron. In the feudal system of Europe, a baron was
- Baron Bliss Day (festival, Belize)
Belize: Daily life and social customs: Baron Bliss Day (March 9) is a national festival honouring a British resident who died while on vacation in Belize and donated his fortune to the construction of local libraries, schools, and other institutions (including the Baron Bliss Institute). St. George’s Cay Day (September 10)…
- Baron Cohen, Sacha (British actor)
Sacha Baron Cohen is a British actor and comedian best known for his politically incorrect social satire. Baron Cohen was born into a devout Jewish family, and he studied history at the University of Cambridge. After deciding to pursue a career in entertainment, in 1998 he joined the television
- Baron Cohen, Sacha Noam (British actor)
Sacha Baron Cohen is a British actor and comedian best known for his politically incorrect social satire. Baron Cohen was born into a devout Jewish family, and he studied history at the University of Cambridge. After deciding to pursue a career in entertainment, in 1998 he joined the television
- Baron de Hirsch Fund
Maurice, baron de Hirsch: …Hirsch founded and endowed the Baron de Hirsch fund in the United States, principally to help Jewish immigrants there to learn a trade. In the late 20th century the fund continued to support the Jewish Agricultural Society, which lent money to farmers and settled displaced persons on farms in various…
- Baron in the Trees, The (work by Calvino)
Italo Calvino: …fantasy, Il barone rampante (1957; The Baron in the Trees), is a whimsical tale of a 19th-century nobleman who one day decides to climb into the trees and who never sets foot on the ground again. From the trees he does, however, participate fully in the affairs of his fellow…
- Baron Munchausen’s Narratives of His Marvelous Travels and Campaigns in Russia (German literature)
tall tale: …found in the German collection Baron Munchausen’s Narratives of His Marvelous Travels and Campaigns in Russia (1785); it includes such humorous tales as one about the soldier who loaded his rifle with a cherry pit, fired it into the head of a stag, and later found a cherry tree rooted…
- Baron of Bluegrass Country (American coach)
Adolph Rupp was an American collegiate basketball coach at the University of Kentucky (1930–72). He retired as the most successful coach in men’s collegiate basketball, with 876 wins. In 1997 he was surpassed by Dean Smith, and the record is held—as of 2024—by Mike Krzyzewski with 1,202 wins.
- Baron Samedi (Vodou)
Bawon Samdi, in Vodou, the father of the spirits (lwa) of the dead. Bawon Samdi is considered to be wise because he holds knowledge of the dead and the outer world. The first male buried in a cemetery is said to become the manifestation of Bawon Samdi, guardian of the cemetery; the first female
- Baron Wilmot of Adderbury (English nobleman)
Henry Wilmot Richmond, 1st Earl of Richmond was a leading Royalist during the English Civil Wars, a principal adviser to the Prince of Wales, later Charles II. Wilmot was the son of Charles Wilmot (c. 1570–1644), the 1st earl of Athlone in the Irish peerage. Having fought against the Scots at
- Baron, Michel (French actor)
Michel Baron was a French actor, from 1670 until his retirement in 1691 the undisputed master of the French stage. The child of theatrical parents, he was orphaned at a young age and joined the company of children known as the Petits Comédiens du Dauphin. He joined Molière’s company in 1670 and was
- Baron, Salo Wittmayer (Austrian-born American historian)
Salo Wittmayer Baron was an Austrian-born American historian who spent much of his life compiling the multivolume magnum opus A Social and Religious History of the Jews (1937), originally published in three volumes but later revised and expanded into 18 volumes. Baron, who was ordained a rabbi at
- barone rampante, Il (work by Calvino)
Italo Calvino: …fantasy, Il barone rampante (1957; The Baron in the Trees), is a whimsical tale of a 19th-century nobleman who one day decides to climb into the trees and who never sets foot on the ground again. From the trees he does, however, participate fully in the affairs of his fellow…
- Barone, Enrico (Italian economist)
Enrico Barone was an Italian mathematical economist who expanded on the concepts of general equilibrium previously formulated by French economist Léon Walras. Barone spent much of his life as an army officer, resigning in 1907 only after obtaining a professorship at the University of Rome. His most
- baronet (title)
baronet, British hereditary dignity, first created by King James I of England in May 1611. The baronetage is not part of the peerage, nor is it an order of knighthood. A baronet ranks below barons but above all knights except, in England, Knights of the Garter and, in Scotland, Knights of the
- Barong (Balinese mythology)
Barong, masked figure, usually representing an unidentified creature called keket, who appears at times of celebration in Bali, Indonesia. For the Balinese, Barong is the symbol of health and good fortune, in opposition to the witch, Rangda (also known as Calonarang). During a dance-drama that
- barong-barong (dwelling)
Manila: Housing: …with common entrance; and the barong-barong, a makeshift shack built of salvaged materials (flattened tin cans, scrap lumber, cartons, or billboards) that is common in the poor areas.
- Baronius, Caesar (Italian historian)
Caesar Baronius was an ecclesiastical historian and apologist for the Roman Catholic Church. He joined the Oratory in Rome in 1557, eventually succeeding Philip Neri as superior in 1593. Clement VIII, whose confessor he was, made him cardinal in 1596, and in the following year he became Vatican
- Barons’ War (English history)
Barons’ War, (1264–67), in English history, the civil war caused by baronial opposition to the costly and inept policies of Henry III. The barons in 1258 had attempted to achieve reform by forcing Henry to abide by the Provisions of Oxford (see Oxford, Provisions of). When, by the Mise of Amiens
- Barons, Articles of the (English history)
John: Baronial rebellion and the Magna Carta: …a document known as the Articles of the Barons. On June 19, after further revisions of the document, the king and the barons accepted the Magna Carta, which ensured feudal rights and restated English law. This settlement was soon rendered unworkable by the more intransigent barons and John’s almost immediate…
- barophile (biology)
extremophile: …below 0 °C [32 °F]); piezophilic, or barophilic (optimal growth at high hydrostatic pressure); oligotrophic (growth in nutritionally limited environments); endolithic (growth within rock or within pores of mineral grains); and xerophilic (growth in dry conditions, with low water availability). Some extremophiles are adapted simultaneously to multiple stresses (polyextremophile); common…