- Barron, Louis (American composer)
Forbidden Planet: Pioneers of electronic music Louis and Bebe Barron composed the first such score for a feature film. (Because of a dispute with the Musician’s Union, the Barrons were credited simply with “electronic tonalities.”) Designer Robert Kinoshita, who built Robby, also created the robot on the 1960s television series Lost…
- Barros Arana, Diego (Chilean historian)
Diego Barros Arana was a Chilean historian, educator, and diplomat best known for his Historia general de Chile, 16 vol. (1884–1902; “General History of Chile”). Barros Arana originally studied for a legal career but gave up the law to pursue his interests in history and literature. In 1859 the
- Barros, Ademar de (Brazilian politician)
São Paulo: The political mix: The bon vivant Adhemar de Barros, who was the state’s appointed chief executive during 1938–41, subsequently won elections for mayor and governor on the basis of such projects as the Anchieta and Anhanguera expressways, the massive Hospital das Clínicas, the electrification of the Sorocabana railroad, and the Vila…
- Barros, Adhemar de (Brazilian politician)
São Paulo: The political mix: The bon vivant Adhemar de Barros, who was the state’s appointed chief executive during 1938–41, subsequently won elections for mayor and governor on the basis of such projects as the Anchieta and Anhanguera expressways, the massive Hospital das Clínicas, the electrification of the Sorocabana railroad, and the Vila…
- Barros, Cristóvão de (Brazilian leader)
Sergipe: …subdued by the firearms of Cristóvão de Barros, who founded the city of São Cristóvão, the first capital, in 1590. In 1820 Sergipe became an independent captaincy. It became a province of the empire in 1824 and a state of the Brazilian republic in 1889.
- Barros, Edmundo de (Brazilian army officer)
Iguaçu Falls: In 1897 Edmundo de Barros, a Brazilian army officer, envisaged the establishment of a national park at Iguaçu Falls. Following boundary rectifications between Brazil and Argentina, two separate national parks were established, one by each country—Iguaçu National Park (1939) in Brazil and Iguazú National Park (1934) in…
- Barros, João de (Portuguese historian)
João de Barros was a Portuguese historian and civil servant who wrote Décadas da Ásia, 4 vol. (1552–1615), one of the first great accounts of European overseas exploration and colonization. Barros was educated in the household of the Portuguese heir-apparent and became a good classical scholar. His
- Barros, Tierra de (region, Spain)
Badajoz: …wider central plain is the Barros Plain, the largest cereal-, wine-, and oil-producing region of Extremadura; its main centre is Almendralejo. Other regions in the province produce wool, and livestock raising is important. Industry, primarily agricultural processing (tomatoes), is concentrated in Badajoz city, Mérida, Almendralejo, and Villanueva de la Serena.…
- Barroso, José Manuel (prime minister of Portugal)
José Manuel Barroso is a Portuguese politician who served as prime minister of Portugal (2002–04) and president of the European Commission (2004–14). Barroso was born to parents who hailed from the region of Valpaços, one of the poorer areas of Portugal. The difficulties of growing up under the
- Barroso, José Manuel Durão (prime minister of Portugal)
José Manuel Barroso is a Portuguese politician who served as prime minister of Portugal (2002–04) and president of the European Commission (2004–14). Barroso was born to parents who hailed from the region of Valpaços, one of the poorer areas of Portugal. The difficulties of growing up under the
- Barrot, Camille-Hyacinthe-Odilon (French politician)
Odilon Barrot was a prominent liberal monarchist under the July Monarchy in France (1830–48) and a leader of the electoral reform movement of 1847. Barrot began his career in 1814 as a barrister in the Court of Cassation. After making his name as a defender of liberals, he was elected president of
- Barrot, Odilon (French politician)
Odilon Barrot was a prominent liberal monarchist under the July Monarchy in France (1830–48) and a leader of the electoral reform movement of 1847. Barrot began his career in 1814 as a barrister in the Court of Cassation. After making his name as a defender of liberals, he was elected president of
- Barrow (town, Alaska, United States)
permafrost: Effects of climate: At Barrow, Alaska, U.S., the mean annual air temperature is −12 °C (10 °F), and the thickness is 400 metres (about 1,300 feet). At Fairbanks, Alaska, in the discontinuous zone of permafrost in central Alaska, the mean annual air temperature is −3 °C (27 °F), and…
- barrow (burial mound)
barrow, in England, ancient burial place covered with a large mound of earth. In Scotland, Ireland, and Wales the equivalent term is cairn. Barrows were constructed in England from Neolithic (c. 4000 bc) until late pre-Christian (c. ad 600) times. Barrows of the Neolithic Period were long and
- Barrow Canyon (submarine canyon, Arctic Ocean)
Barrow Canyon, submarine canyon incised into the Arctic continental shelf off Alaska. From its head in the Chukchi Sea, about 95 miles (150 km) west of Point Barrow, in water depths of about 150 feet (45 metres), the canyon trends northeast along the coast and crosses into the Beaufort Sea, north
- Barrow Island (island, Western Australia, Australia)
Barrow Island, Australian island in the Indian Ocean, 30 miles (50 km) off the northwest coast of Western Australia and 10 miles (16 km) southwest of the Montebello Islands. Measuring 12 by 5 miles (19 by 8 km), it has an area of 78 square miles (202 square km). It is geologically an extension of
- Barrow’s goldeneye (bird)
goldeneye: …the major breeding areas of Barrow’s goldeneye (B. islandica) are in northwestern North America and Iceland. Both winter mainly in northern coastal waters. Although prized as game birds because of their wariness, they are not highly desired for the table. Both species are about 46 cm (18 inches) long and…
- Barrow, Adama (president of The Gambia)
The Gambia: 2016 presidential election, Jammeh’s standoff, and ECOWAS intervention: …to support just one candidate, Adama Barrow, who agreed to serve only a three-year transitional term. The newly united opposition posed the greatest threat to Jammeh in his 22 years of rule. A former ruling-party member, Mamma Kandeh, was the third candidate in the election. Prior to the poll, Jammeh…
- Barrow, Clyde (American criminal)
Bonnie and Clyde: Barrow had been a criminal long before he met Parker in January 1930. After 20 months in prison in 1930–32, he teamed up with Parker, and the two began a crime spree that lasted 21 months. Often working with confederates—including Barrow’s brother Buck and Buck’s…
- Barrow, Dean (prime minister of Belize)
Belize: Independence of Belize: The UDP, now led by Dean Barrow, triumphed in the 2008 general elections, and Barrow became the country’s first black prime minister. His party promised to end crime and government corruption and to create an elected Senate. Although a democratic tradition has been established in Belize, the country has struggled…
- Barrow, Errol (prime minister of Barbados)
Barbados: Barbados since independence: In 1968 Errol Barrow, who served as prime minister in 1966–76 and 1986–87, helped form the Caribbean Free Trade Association, which became the Caribbean Community and Common Market (Caricom) in 1973. The island has also established close ties with countries elsewhere in the less-developed world.
- Barrow, Geoff (British musician)
Portishead: …North East Somerset, England), producer Geoff Barrow (b. December 9, 1971, Walton-in-Gordano, North Somerset, England), and guitarist Adrian Utley (b. April 27, 1957, Northampton, Northamptonshire, England).
- Barrow, Henry (English religious leader)
Henry Barrow was a lawyer and early Congregationalist martyr who challenged the established Anglican church by supporting the formation of separate and independent churches in England. After leading a dissolute life as a student at the University of Cambridge, he was converted through the chance
- Barrow, Isaac (English mathematician)
Isaac Barrow was an English classical scholar, theologian, and mathematician who was the teacher of Isaac Newton. He developed a method of determining tangents that closely approached the methods of calculus, and he first recognized that what became known as the processes of integration and
- Barrow, John D. (British astrophysicist)
John D. Barrow was a British astrophysicist who received the 2006 Templeton Prize for Progress Toward Research or Discoveries About Spiritual Realities. Barrow earned a doctorate (1977) in astrophysics at the University of Oxford, and he taught at Oxford, the University of California, Berkeley, and
- Barrow, John David (British astrophysicist)
John D. Barrow was a British astrophysicist who received the 2006 Templeton Prize for Progress Toward Research or Discoveries About Spiritual Realities. Barrow earned a doctorate (1977) in astrophysics at the University of Oxford, and he taught at Oxford, the University of California, Berkeley, and
- Barrow, Joseph Louis (American boxer)
Joe Louis was an American boxer who was world heavyweight champion from June 22, 1937, when he knocked out James J. Braddock in eight rounds in Chicago, until March 1, 1949, when he briefly retired. During his reign, the longest in the history of any weight division, he successfully defended his
- Barrow, River (river, Ireland)
River Barrow, river rising in the Slieve Bloom mountain range in the centre of Ireland and flowing for about 120 miles (190 km) to Waterford harbour in the southeast, where it joins the Rivers Nore and Suir. From its upper mountain course in counties Laoighis and Offaly, it flows east across bogs
- Barrow-in-Furness (England, United Kingdom)
Barrow-in-Furness, port town and borough (district), administrative county of Cumbria, historic county of Lancashire, northwestern England. It lies on the seaward side of the Furness peninsula between the estuary of the River Duddon and Morecambe Bay. A narrow channel of the Irish Sea, now bridged,
- Barrow-in-Furness (district, England, United Kingdom)
Barrow-in-Furness: borough (district), administrative county of Cumbria, historic county of Lancashire, northwestern England. It lies on the seaward side of the Furness peninsula between the estuary of the River Duddon and Morecambe Bay. A narrow channel of the Irish Sea, now bridged, lies between the mainland…
- Barry (Wales, United Kingdom)
Barry, port town, Vale of Glamorgan county, historic county of Glamorgan (Morgannwg), southern Wales. It is situated on the Bristol Channel, just west of where the channel is met by the mouth of the River Severn estuary, and is the administrative centre of Vale of Glamorgan county. Barry has
- Barry (film by Gandhi [2016])
Anya Taylor-Joy: Becoming a scream queen: …Obama in the Netflix film Barry (2016). She was nonetheless soon branded as a “scream queen” thanks in part to The Witch and to roles in M. Night Shyamalan’s sequels to his 2000 thriller Unbreakable, Split (2016) and Glass (2019). In those sequels, Taylor-Joy assumed the role of Casey, a…
- Barry Goldwater on conservatism
Two years before he challenged Lyndon B. Johnson in the 1964 U.S. presidential election, Senator Barry Goldwater engaged in a debate with a fellow senator, Jacob K. Javits, in the pages of The Great Ideas Today, a Britannica publication.“Does America’s best hope for the future lie in political
- Barry Lyndon (historical novel by Thackeray)
Barry Lyndon, historical novel by William Makepeace Thackeray, first published in Fraser’s Magazine in 1844 as The Luck of Barry Lyndon: A Romance of the Last Century. The book was published in two volumes in 1852–53, and it was revised (“with admissions”) as The Memoirs of Barry Lyndon, Esq. in
- Barry Lyndon (film by Kubrick [1975])
Stanley Kubrick: Films of the 1970s of Stanley Kubrick: …passed in the preparation of Barry Lyndon (1975), which Kubrick adapted himself from William Makepeace Thackeray’s novel of the same name. Ryan O’Neal starred as the title character, an 18th-century Irish rogue who narrates his story in voice-over. Kubrick’s obsessive insistence on filming with natural lighting of the period (including…
- Barry University (university, Miami Shores, Florida, United States)
Miami: The contemporary city: …Miami (1925) in Coral Gables, Barry University (1940) in Miami Shores, St. Thomas University (1961), Florida Memorial College (1879), International Fine Arts College (1965), Miami-Dade Community College (1960), and Florida International University (1972), the site of the National Hurricane Center operated by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Jackson
- Barry, Brent (American basketball player)
Rick Barry: …also played professional basketball, including Brent, who was a member of two championship-winning San Antonio Spurs teams, making the Barrys the second father-son duo to capture NBA titles (preceded by Matt Guokas, Sr., and Matt Guokas, Jr., and followed by Bill Walton and Luke Walton). Barry was inducted into the…
- Barry, James (Irish painter)
James Barry was an Irish-born artist whose major work, The Progress of Human Culture, is a series of six monumental paintings of historical and allegorical subjects done for the Great Room of the Royal Society of Arts, London. Largely a self-taught artist, Barry in 1763 attracted the patronage of
- Barry, James Miranda (Irish doctor)
James Miranda Barry was an Irish doctor who served as a medical inspector for the British armed forces in the mid-19th century. Barry was well known as a champion and fierce advocate of public health and sanitation. His legacy endured, however, partly because of the posthumous revelation that Barry
- Barry, Jeanne Bécu, comtesse du (mistress of Louis XV of France)
Jeanne Bécu, countess du Barry was the last of the mistresses of the French king Louis XV (reigned 1715–74). Although she exercised little political influence at the French court, her unpopularity contributed to the decline of the prestige of the crown in the early 1770s. She was born Marie-Jeanne
- Barry, Jeff (American songwriter)
The Brill Building: Assembly-Line Pop: Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil, Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich, and Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman were to rock and roll what Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart and George and Ira Gershwin were to Tin Pan Alley. The difference was that the writers of Brill Building pop understood the teenage…
- Barry, John (British composer and conductor)
John Barry British composer who provided the musical scores for more than 100 motion pictures and television programs, notably 11 movies featuring Ian Fleming’s iconic spy James Bond—From Russia with Love (1963), Goldfinger (1964), Thunderball (1965), You Only Live Twice (1967), On Her Majesty’s
- Barry, John (United States naval officer)
John Barry was an American naval officer who won significant maritime victories during the American Revolution (1775–83). Because he trained so many young officers who later became celebrated in the nation’s history, he was often called the “Father of the Navy.” A merchant shipmaster out of
- Barry, Linda Jean (American cartoonist, author, and playwright)
Lynda Barry is an American cartoonist and author known for her syndicated weekly comic strip Ernie Pook’s Comeek (1979–2008) and the graphic novels The Good Times Are Killing Me (1988) and What It Is (2008). Barry was born to a father of Irish and Norwegian descent who worked as a butcher and a
- Barry, Lynda (American cartoonist, author, and playwright)
Lynda Barry is an American cartoonist and author known for her syndicated weekly comic strip Ernie Pook’s Comeek (1979–2008) and the graphic novels The Good Times Are Killing Me (1988) and What It Is (2008). Barry was born to a father of Irish and Norwegian descent who worked as a butcher and a
- Barry, Marie-Jeanne Bécu, comtesse du (mistress of Louis XV of France)
Jeanne Bécu, countess du Barry was the last of the mistresses of the French king Louis XV (reigned 1715–74). Although she exercised little political influence at the French court, her unpopularity contributed to the decline of the prestige of the crown in the early 1770s. She was born Marie-Jeanne
- Barry, Marion (American activist and politician)
Marion Barry was an American civil rights activist and politician who served four terms as mayor of Washington, D.C. Barry received a bachelor’s degree from LeMoyne College (1958) and a master’s degree from Fisk University (1960). He was a founding member of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating
- Barry, Marion Shepilov, Jr. (American activist and politician)
Marion Barry was an American civil rights activist and politician who served four terms as mayor of Washington, D.C. Barry received a bachelor’s degree from LeMoyne College (1958) and a master’s degree from Fisk University (1960). He was a founding member of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating
- Barry, Miranda (British surgeon)
dress: Rebellion: …not allowed to become doctors, Miranda Barry dressed as a man and obtained a degree in medicine at the University of Edinburgh. She then became an army surgeon and ended her career as inspector general of military hospitals in Canada in 1857, after serving in the Crimean War.
- Barry, Philip (American dramatist)
Philip Barry was an American dramatist best known for his comedies of life and manners among the socially privileged. Barry was educated at Yale and in 1919 entered George Pierce Baker’s Workshop 47 at Harvard. His A Punch for Judy was produced by the workshop in 1920. You and I, also written while
- Barry, Phillips (American collector)
ballad: Theories: …forward by the American collector Phillips Barry (1880–1937) and the scholar G.H. Gerould (1877–1953), the ballad is conceded to be an individual composition originally. This fact is considered of little importance because the singer is not expressing himself individually, but serving as the deputy of the public voice, and because…
- Barry, Richard Francis Dennis, III (American basketball player)
Rick Barry is an American professional basketball player who was one of the most prolific scorers and accurate free throw shooters in the sport’s history. In his 14 seasons playing in both the National Basketball Association (NBA) and the American Basketball Association (ABA), he was a first-team
- Barry, Rick (American basketball player)
Rick Barry is an American professional basketball player who was one of the most prolific scorers and accurate free throw shooters in the sport’s history. In his 14 seasons playing in both the National Basketball Association (NBA) and the American Basketball Association (ABA), he was a first-team
- Barry, Sir Charles (British architect)
Sir Charles Barry was one of the architects of the Gothic Revival in England and chief architect of the British Houses of Parliament. The son of a stationer, Barry was articled to a firm of surveyors and architects until 1817, when he set out on a three-year tour of France, Greece, Italy, Egypt,
- Barrymore family (American theatrical family)
Barrymore family, U.S. theatrical family. Maurice Barrymore (orig. Herbert Blythe; 1847/49–1905) made his stage debut in London before moving to New York City (1875), where he adopted Barrymore as his stage name. He joined Augustin Daly’s company and in 1876 married Georgiana Drew, of the
- Barrymore, Drew (American actress, producer, and director)
Drew Barrymore is an American actress, producer, and director who transitioned from child star to leading lady and is especially known for her work in romantic comedies. (Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film preservation.) Barrymore comes from a long line famous actors, most notably her
- Barrymore, Drew Blythe (American actress, producer, and director)
Drew Barrymore is an American actress, producer, and director who transitioned from child star to leading lady and is especially known for her work in romantic comedies. (Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film preservation.) Barrymore comes from a long line famous actors, most notably her
- Barrymore, Ethel (American actress)
Ethel Barrymore was an American stage and film actress whose distinctive style, voice, and wit made her the “first lady” of the American theatre. The daughter of the actors Maurice and Georgiana Drew Barrymore, Ethel made her professional debut in New York City in 1894 in a company headed by her
- Barrymore, Georgiana (American actress)
Georgiana Barrymore was an actress and, with Maurice Barrymore, founder of the famous stage and screen family Barrymore, which occupied a preeminent position in American theatre in the first half of the 20th century. Georgiana Drew was the daughter of John Drew and Louisa Lane Drew, both
- Barrymore, John (American actor)
John Barrymore was an American actor, called “The Great Profile,” who is remembered both for his film and stage roles as a debonair leading man and for his interpretations of William Shakespeare’s Richard III and Hamlet. (See Barrymore reading from Henry VI, Part 3.) John was born into a theatrical
- Barrymore, Lionel (American actor)
Lionel Barrymore was an American stage, film, and radio actor who forged a career as one of the most important character actors of the early 20th century. Perhaps the least flamboyant member of the Barrymore acting family, he was best known to modern audiences for his performance as Mr. Potter in
- Barrymore, Maurice (Indian-born British actor)
Maurice Barrymore was an Indian-born British actor and sometime playwright. He was the founder—with his wife, Georgiana Barrymore—of the renowned Barrymore theatrical family. Herbert Blythe’s father was a surveyor for the British East India Company, and the boy was sent back to England for
- bars (game)
prisoner’s base, children’s game in which players of one team seek to tag and imprison players of the other team who venture out of their home territory, or base. Under the name of barres, this game is mentioned in 14th-century French writings and may have been one of the most popular games in
- Bars Fight (poem by Terry)
Lucy Terry: …only surviving work, the poem “Bars Fight” (1746), is the earliest existing poem by an African American. It was transmitted orally for more than 100 years, first appearing in print in 1855. Consisting of 28 lines in irregular iambic tetrameter, the poem commemorates white settlers who were killed in an…
- Barsaat (film by Kapoor [1949])
Lata Mangeshkar: …such films as Mahal (1949), Barsaat (1949), Satyam shivam sundaram (1978), and Maine pyar kiya (1989). Notable among her concert performances was her wartime rendition of the poet Pradeep’s patriotic song “Ae mere watan ke logo,” which moved Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru to tears.
- Barsac (district, France)
Bordeaux wine: Sauternes and Barsac: The natural sweet wines, fruity with enduring rich flavour, of this district are usually considered among the world’s finest. To achieve their quality the grapes are left until overripe on the vines before harvesting, thus producing the ripeness known as pourriture noble, which leaves…
- Barsbay (Mamlūk sultan)
Mamluk: The Mamluk dynasty: Under the rule of Sultan Barsbay (1422–38) internal stability was restored briefly and Mamluk glory resuscitated by the conquest of Cyprus in 1426. Yet the increasingly higher taxes demanded to finance such ventures enlarged the Mamluks’ financial difficulties. The final economic blow fell with the Portuguese assault on trade in…
- Barschel, Uwe (German politician)
Björn Engholm: …the staff of the winner, Uwe Barschel. Although Barschel denied knowledge of any dirty tricks, he resigned in October 1987 and about a week later died under mysterious circumstances. During a subsequent investigation, Engholm claimed that he was unaware of the source of the smears until after the election. Late…
- Barsento, Emilio Pucci, Marchese di (Italian fashion designer)
Emilio Pucci, marquis di Barsento was an Italian fashion designer and politician. Pucci, who came from a wealthy, aristocratic Florentine family, was educated for a diplomatic career. He earned a Ph.D. in social science but entered the Italian air force in 1941 and remained in the service after the
- Barsetshire novels (novels by Trollope)
Barsetshire novels, a series of six connected novels by Anthony Trollope set in the fictional west England county of Barset. Trollope prided himself on the scope and detail with which he imagined the geography, history, and social structure of his fictional county. Nevertheless, character
- Barṣīṣā (legendary Islamic ascetic)
Barṣīṣā, in Islāmic legend, an ascetic who succumbed to the devil’s temptations and denied God. Barṣīṣā, a saintly recluse, is given care of a sick woman by her three brothers, who are going on a journey. At the devil’s suggestion Barṣīṣā seduces the woman. When he discovers that she has conceived,
- Barska Konfederacja (Polish history)
Confederation of Bar, league of Polish nobles and gentry that was formed to defend the liberties of the nobility within the Roman Catholic Church and the independence of Poland from Russian encroachment. Its activities precipitated a civil war, foreign intervention, and the First Partition of
- barsman (Zoroastrianism)
ancient Iran: Zoroastrianism: …carried in his hand the barsman (barsom), or bundle of sacred grass. His mouth was covered to prevent the sacred fire from being polluted by his breath. The practice of animal sacrifice, abhorred by the modern followers of Zoroaster, is attested for the Sāsānian period at least as late as…
- barsom (Zoroastrianism)
ancient Iran: Zoroastrianism: …carried in his hand the barsman (barsom), or bundle of sacred grass. His mouth was covered to prevent the sacred fire from being polluted by his breath. The practice of animal sacrifice, abhorred by the modern followers of Zoroaster, is attested for the Sāsānian period at least as late as…
- Barss (racehorse)
harness racing: Early history.: From his stallion Barss came the Orlov trotter that became the foundation of Russian trotting stock.
- barstar (bacterium)
bacillus: In addition, strains of B. amyloliquefaciens bacteria, which occur in association with certain plants, are known to synthesize several different antibiotic substances, including bacillaene, macrolactin, and difficidin. These substances serve to protect the host plant from infection by fungi or other bacteria and have been studied for their usefulness…
- barstool (furniture)
stool: …was the development of the barstool, a high stool (with or without arms and back) usually fixed to a central post and used in bars and cocktail lounges.
- Barstovian Stage (geology)
Barstovian Stage, uppermost major division of the Miocene Epoch (23 million to 5.3 million years ago) in North America. The Barstovian Stage follows the Hemingfordian Stage and precedes the Clarendonian Stage of the Pliocene Epoch. It was named for exposures studied near Barstow, Calif. The
- Barstow (California, United States)
Barstow, city, San Bernardino county, south-central California, U.S. Located in the Mojave Desert, the city lies at a junction of pioneer trails. It was founded in 1880 during a silver-mining rush and was first called Fishpond and then Waterman Junction. It was renamed in 1886 to honor William
- Barstow, Stan (British novelist)
Stan Barstow was an English novelist who was noted for his unsentimental depiction of working-class life. Barstow grew up in a working-class environment and held a job in the engineering industry until 1962, when the enormous success of his first book, A Kind of Loving (1960; film 1962; stage play
- Barstow, Stanley (British novelist)
Stan Barstow was an English novelist who was noted for his unsentimental depiction of working-class life. Barstow grew up in a working-class environment and held a job in the engineering industry until 1962, when the enormous success of his first book, A Kind of Loving (1960; film 1962; stage play
- Barsuki (work by Leonov)
Leonid Maksimovich Leonov: …epic first novel, Barsuki (The Badgers), which he followed with Vor (1927; The Thief), a pessimistic tale set in the Moscow criminal underworld.
- Barsumas (Christian theologian)
Nestorianism: Under the influence of Barsumas, the metropolitan of Nisibis, the Persian Church acknowledged Theodore of Mopsuestia, the chief Nestorian theological authority, as guardian of right faith, in February 486. This position was reaffirmed under the patriarch Babai (497–502), and since that time the church has been Nestorian.
- BART (transit system, California, United States)
San Francisco: Transportation: …interurban rapid-transit system known as BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit), which began operating in 1972. With service between San Francisco and surrounding communities through an underwater tube more than 3.6 miles (5.8 km) long, BART was the first system of its sort—part subway and part elevated—to be built in half…
- Bart’s (hospital, London, United Kingdom)
Saint Bartholomew’s Hospital, oldest hospital in London. It lies just southeast of the Central Markets in the Smithfield area of the City of London. It was founded in 1123 by the Augustinian monk Rahere, who also founded the adjacent priory (the surviving part of which is now the church of Saint
- Bart, Jean (French military officer)
Jean Bart was a French privateer and naval officer, renowned for his skillful and daring achievements in the wars of Louis XIV. Descended from a family of fishermen and privateers, Bart entered naval service first under the Dutch admiral Michiel de Ruyter, but when war broke out between the French
- Bart, Lily (fictional character)
Lily Bart, fictional character, a beautiful impoverished woman in Edith Wharton’s novel The House of Mirth (1905). Tenuously associated with the upper-class New York society of the turn of the century, Lily is an orphan with no money of her own, and she lives by the values she has been taught since
- Bartas, Guillaume de Salluste, seigneur du (French poet)
Guillaume de Salluste, seigneur du Bartas was the author of La Semaine (1578), an influential poem about the creation of the world. Though he tried to avoid participating in the Wars of Religion, du Bartas was an ardent Huguenot and a trusted counsellor of Henry of Navarre. His aim was to use the
- Bartenstein, Johann Christoph, Freiherr von (Austrian statesman)
Johann Christoph, baron von Bartenstein was an Austrian statesman and trusted counsellor of Emperor Charles VI. He created the political system that was based upon the Pragmatic Sanction; it was intended to guarantee the peaceful accession of Charles VI’s daughter Maria Theresa to the entire
- barter (trade)
barter, the direct exchange of goods or services—without an intervening medium of exchange or money—either according to established rates of exchange or by bargaining. It is considered the oldest form of commerce. Barter is common among traditional societies, particularly in those communities with
- Barter (island, Canada)
Beaufort Sea: …mouth—Herschel (7 sq mi) and Barter (5 sq mi). Very small islands and banks are found in the Mackenzie River Delta.
- Barter Theatre (theater, Abingdon, Virginia, United States)
Virginia: Cultural life: The Barter Theatre was founded by actor Robert Porterfield in 1933 in the tiny southwestern town of Abingdon; its original charge for admission was produce, handicrafts, or whatever the prospective viewer could afford. Dozens of art galleries are located throughout Virginia. There are several ballet companies,…
- Bartered Bride, The (opera by Smetana)
Max Ophüls: …were Die verkaufte Braut (1932; The Bartered Bride), regarded as one of the best film adaptations of an opera, and Liebelei (1932; “Love Affair”), a bittersweet love story set in Vienna. Both films included several of Ophüls’s trademark elements: lavish settings fitted with ornate and glistening decor, elaborate camera movement,…
- Barth, Heinrich (German geographer and explorer)
Heinrich Barth was a German geographer and one of the great explorers of Africa. Educated in the classics at the University of Berlin, Barth was a competent linguist who was fluent in French, Spanish, Italian, English, and Arabic. He traveled the Mediterranean coastal areas that are now part of
- Barth, Jean (French military officer)
Jean Bart was a French privateer and naval officer, renowned for his skillful and daring achievements in the wars of Louis XIV. Descended from a family of fishermen and privateers, Bart entered naval service first under the Dutch admiral Michiel de Ruyter, but when war broke out between the French
- Barth, John (American writer)
John Barth was an American writer best known for novels that combine philosophical depth and complexity with biting satire and boisterous, frequently bawdy humor. Much of Barth’s writing was concerned with the seeming impossibility of choosing the right action in a world that has no absolute
- Barth, John Simmons (American writer)
John Barth was an American writer best known for novels that combine philosophical depth and complexity with biting satire and boisterous, frequently bawdy humor. Much of Barth’s writing was concerned with the seeming impossibility of choosing the right action in a world that has no absolute
- Barth, Karl (Swiss theologian)
Karl Barth was one of the most influential Protestant theologians of the 20th century who radically changed Protestant thought in his emphasis of the “wholly otherness of God.” Barth recovered the centrality of the doctrine of the Trinity within the dynamic and rational structure of Christian
- Barth, Paul (German philosopher and sociologist)
Paul Barth was a German philosopher and sociologist who considered society as an organization in which progress is determined by the power of ideas. Barth was professor of philosophy and education in Leipzig from 1897. His Philosophy of History of Hegel and the Hegelians (1896) and his broad
- Barthé, James Richmond (American sculptor)
Richmond Barthé was an American sculptor who was a vital participant in the Harlem Renaissance. Barthé was born to parents of African, French, and Native American descent. At age 23 he went to Chicago, where he studied art at the Art Institute of Chicago from 1924 to 1928. He began as a painter