- Beecher, Henry Ward (American minister)
Henry Ward Beecher was a liberal U.S. Congregational minister whose oratorical skill and social concern made him one of the most influential Protestant spokesmen of his time. He was the eighth of the Rev. Lyman Beecher’s 13 children and showed little promise at various schools until he went to
- Beecher, Isabella (American suffragist)
Isabella Beecher Hooker was an American suffragist prominent in the fight for women’s rights in the mid- to late 19th century. Isabella Beecher was a daughter of the Reverend Lyman Beecher and a half sister of Henry Ward Beecher, Catharine Beecher, and Harriet Beecher Stowe. She was educated mainly
- Beecher, Lyman (American minister)
Lyman Beecher was a U.S. Presbyterian clergyman in the revivalist tradition and an important figure in the Second Great Awakening. A graduate of Yale University in 1797, he held pastorates at Litchfield, Connecticut, and at Boston, during which he opposed rationalism, Catholicism, and the liquor
- Beeching, Richard Beeching, Baron (English jurist)
Crown Court: …royal commission chaired by Richard Beeching, Baron Beeching, studied the feasibility of converting all the existing assizes and quarter sessions courts into a system of Crown Courts to meet the growing case loads across the nation, and the commission’s recommendations became the Courts Act of 1971.
- Beechworth (Victoria, Australia)
Beechworth, town, northeastern Victoria, Australia, at the foot of the Victorian Alps. The original settlement (c. 1839), called Mayday Hills, was renamed for a place in England. It was proclaimed a town in 1856, a borough in 1863, and a shire in 1865. During the mid-19th century it was a centre of
- Beeckman, Isaac (Dutch philosopher)
René Descartes: Early life and education: …and mathematics by the physicist Isaac Beeckman (1588–1637), for whom he wrote the Compendium of Music (written 1618, published 1650), his first surviving work.
- Beecroft, John (British explorer and diplomat)
John Beecroft was an adventurer, trader, explorer, and as British consul (1849–54) for the Bights of Benin and Biafra (the coastal area from present-day Benin to Cameroon), a forerunner of British imperial expansion in West Africa, both in his personal enthusiasm and in his systematic intervention
- Beed (India)
Bid, city, central Maharashtra state, western India, on a tributary of the Krishna River near a gap in a range of low hills. Bid was known earlier as Champavatinagar. Its other name, Bir or Bhir, probably was derived from the Persian bhir (“water”). In its early history it belonged to the Chalukya
- Beedle, William Franklin, Jr. (American actor)
William Holden was an American film star who perfected the role of the cynic who acts heroically in spite of his scorn or pessimism. Beedle grew up in South Pasadena, California. While attending Pasadena Junior College, he acted in local radio plays and became involved with the Pasadena Playhouse.
- Beef (American television miniseries)
Ali Wong: …Lau in the rage-fueled miniseries Beef (2023), becoming the first Asian American woman to win an Emmy for best lead actress. She is known for her stand-up comedy specials Ali Wong: Baby Cobra (2016), Ali Wong: Hard Knock Wife (2018), and Ali Wong: Don Wong (2022) and for her work…
- beef (meat)
beef, flesh of mature cattle, as distinguished from veal, the flesh of calves. The best beef is obtained from early maturing, special beef breeds. High-quality beef is firm, velvety, fine-grained, lean, bright red in colour and well-marbled. The fat is smooth, creamy white, and well distributed. In
- beef cattle (livestock)
cattle, domesticated bovine farm animals that are raised for their meat, milk, or hides or for draft purposes. The animals most often included under the term are the Western or European domesticated cattle as well as the Indian and African domesticated cattle. However, certain other bovids such as
- beef cattle breeds
All modern domestic cattle are believed to belong to the species Bos taurus (European breeds such as Shorthorn and Jersey) or Bos indicus (Zebu breeds such as Brahman) or to be crosses of these two (such as Santa Gertrudis). Beef cattle breeds as they are known today did not always exist, and many
- beef Shorthorn (breed of cattle)
livestock farming: Beef cattle breeds: The beef, or Scotch, Shorthorn breed developed from early cattle of England and northern Europe, selected for heavy milk production and generally known as Durham cattle. These were later selected for the compact, beefy type by the Scottish breeders. Emphasis on leaner, highquality carcasses in the second half…
- beef Stroganoff (food)
beef Stroganoff, dish of French origin by way of tsarist Russia that combines thinly sliced and lightly stewed beef and onions with sour cream and other ingredients. Beef Stroganoff is, in essence, the classic French fricassée de boeuf with the addition of equally classic Russian ingredients:
- beef tapeworm (flatworm)
tapeworm: The life cycle of the beef tapeworm (Taenia saginata, or Taeniarhynchus saginatis), which occurs worldwide where beef is eaten raw or improperly cooked, is much like that of the pork tapeworm. Man is the definitive host; cattle serve as the intermediate host.
- Beef Trust (American trust)
Meat Inspection Act of 1906: Origins of reform: …public outrage was the “Beef Trust”—a collaborative group made up of the five largest meatpacking companies—and its base of packinghouses in Chicago’s Packingtown area. Journalists published pieces in radical and muckraking magazines detailing the monopolistic and exploitive practices of Beef Trust businesses as well as the unsanitary conditions of…
- beef Wellington (food)
beef Wellington, beef fillet coated in chopped mushrooms and liver pâté and baked inside a puff pastry shell. Considerable confusion surrounds the origin of beef Wellington. One version that seems more legend than fact attributes it to a cook for the famed duke of Wellington (Arthur Wellesley), the
- Beefeater (guardian of Tower of London)
yeoman warder, the official guardian of the Tower of London. The office of yeoman warder has existed since the Tower was constructed in the 11th century; it is one of the oldest such offices in the world (compare Swiss Guards). In early times yeoman warders were charged with guarding the Tower’s
- Beefeaters, the (American music group)
the Byrds, American band of the 1960s who popularized folk rock, particularly the songs of Bob Dylan, and whose changes in personnel created an extensive family tree of major country rock bands and pop supergroups. The principal members were Roger McGuinn (original name James Joseph McGuinn III; b.
- Beefheart, Captain (American musician)
Captain Beefheart was an innovative American avant-garde rock and blues singer, songwriter, and instrumentalist. Performing with the shifting lineup of musicians known as His Magic Band, Captain Beefheart produced a series of albums from the 1960s to the ’80s that had limited commercial appeal but
- beeflower (plant)
angiosperm: Pollination: Flowers pollinated by bees commonly have a zygomorphic, or bilaterally symmetrical, corolla with a lower lip providing a landing platform for the bee. Nectar is commonly produced either at the base of the corolla tube or in extensions of the corolla base. The bees partially…
- Beefmaster (breed of cattle)
Brahman: …these mixtures, such as the Beefmaster, is markedly low in fat. Other notable crosses include the Charbray, from the Brahman and Charolais, and the Brangus, from the Brahman and Angus. Pure-bred Brahmans today are used primarily for breeding and seldom slaughtered.
- beefsteak fungus (Polyporales species)
Agaricales: Other families and genera: Fistulina hepatica, commonly called beefsteak fungus, is an edible species found in the autumn on oaks and other trees, on which it causes a stain called brown oak. Its common name is derived from its colour, which resembles that of raw beef.
- beefwood (plant)
Casuarinaceae: Some, especially the beefwood (C. equisetifolia, also called she-oak, ironwood, Australian pine, whistling pine, or swamp oak), also are used ornamentally in warm-climate countries, where they have often escaped cultivation and become established in the wild.
- beehive (beekeeping)
lepidopteran: Importance: …mellonella) causes considerable damage in beehives.
- beehive cactus (plant)
beehive cactus, (genus Coryphantha), genus of nearly 60 species of cacti (family Cactaceae) native to western North America and central Mexico. Several species are cultivated as ornamental plants, and some are listed as endangered species on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Beehive cacti
- beehive house (architecture)
beehive house, primitive type of residence designed by enlarging a simple stone hemisphere, constructed out of individual blocks, to provide greater height at the centre; the form resembles a straw beehive, hence, its name. The beehive house is typical of Celtic dwellings from 2000 bc in Scotland
- Beehive State (state, United States)
Utah, constituent state of the United States of America. Mountains, high plateaus, and deserts form most of its landscape. The capital, Salt Lake City, is located in the north-central region of the state. The state lies in the heart of the West and is bounded by Idaho to the north, Wyoming to the
- beehive tomb (architecture)
tholos, in ancient Greek architecture, a circular building with a conical or vaulted roof and with or without a peristyle, or surrounding colonnade. In the Mycenaean period, tholoi were large ceremonial tombs, sometimes built into the sides of hills; they were beehive-shaped and covered by a
- Beehive Tomb (archaeological site, Mycenae, Greece)
Treasury of Atreus, a beehive, or tholos, tomb built about 1350 to 1250 bc at Mycenae, Greece. This surviving architectural structure of the Mycenaean civilization is a pointed dome built up of overhanging (i.e., corbeled) blocks of conglomerate masonry cut and polished to give the impression of a
- Beehive, The (astronomy)
Praesepe, (catalog numbers NGC 2632 and M 44), open, or galactic, cluster of about 1,000 stars in the zodiacal constellation Cancer and located about 550 light-years from Earth. Visible to the unaided eye as a small patch of bright haze, it was first distinguished as a group of stars by Galileo. It
- Beehive, The (artists’ colony, France)
The Beehive, artists’ settlement on the outskirts of the Montparnasse section of Paris, which in the early 20th century was the centre of much avant-garde activity. The Beehive housed the ramshackle living quarters and studios of many painters and sculptors, among them Marc Chagall, Fernand Léger,
- beekeeping
beekeeping, care and management of colonies of honeybees. They are kept for their honey and other products or their services as pollinators of fruit and vegetable blossoms or as a hobby. The practice is widespread: honeybees are kept in large cities and villages, on farms and rangelands, in forests
- Beelzebub (religion)
Beelzebub, in the Bible, the prince of the devils. In the Old Testament, in the form Baalzebub, it is the name given to the god of the Philistine city of Ekron (II Kings 1:1–18). Neither name is found elsewhere in the Old Testament, and there is only one reference to it in other Jewish literature.
- Beelzebul (religion)
Beelzebub, in the Bible, the prince of the devils. In the Old Testament, in the form Baalzebub, it is the name given to the god of the Philistine city of Ekron (II Kings 1:1–18). Neither name is found elsewhere in the Old Testament, and there is only one reference to it in other Jewish literature.
- Been Waiting (album by Mauboy)
Jessica Mauboy: In late 2008 Mauboy released Been Waiting, her first solo studio album. It included several successful singles such as “Running Back,” which features rap artist Flo Rida, and “Burn,” her first song to reach number one in Australia. In 2009 Mauboy performed as a supporting act on the Australian leg…
- beer (alcoholic beverage)
beer, alcoholic beverage produced by extracting raw materials with water, boiling (usually with hops), and fermenting. In some countries beer is defined by law—as in Germany, where the standard ingredients, besides water, are malt (kiln-dried germinated barley), hops, and yeast. Before 6000 bce,
- beer brewing
beer: History of brewing: Before 6000 bce, beer was made from barley in Sumer and Babylonia. Reliefs on Egyptian tombs dating from 2400 bce show that barley or partly germinated barley was crushed, mixed with water, and dried into cakes. When broken up and mixed with water, the…
- Beer Hall Putsch (German history [1923])
Beer Hall Putsch, abortive attempt by Adolf Hitler and Erich Ludendorff to start an insurrection in Germany against the Weimar Republic on November 8–9, 1923. The regime of the Weimar Republic was challenged from both right and left in Germany throughout the early 1920s, and there was widespread
- beer summit (United States history)
Henry Louis Gates, Jr.: …became informally known as the “beer summit” because Obama invited the two for beers in the White House Rose Garden.
- Beer War (German history)
Germany: The princes and the Landstände: …cities in the ensuing “Beer War” and radically revised their constitutions to his own advantage. On the other hand, the great cities of southern Germany, enriched by the Italian trade, were more than a match for the local princes: the Wittelsbach dukes of Bavaria were decisively worsted by Regensburg…
- Beer’s law (physics)
Beer’s law, in spectroscopy, a relation concerning the absorption of radiant energy by an absorbing medium. Formulated by German mathematician and chemist August Beer in 1852, it states that the absorptive capacity of a dissolved substance is directly proportional to its concentration in a
- Beer, Israel (Israeli military analyst)
Israel Beer was an Israeli military analyst who was convicted (1962) for treason as a Soviet agent. Arriving in Palestine (1938), Beer joined the Haganah, attaining the rank of lieutenant colonel in the Israeli army. After retiring from military service (1949), he held the chair of military history
- Beer, Jakob Liebmann Meyer (German composer)
Giacomo Meyerbeer was a German opera composer who established in Paris a vogue for spectacular romantic opera. Born of a wealthy Jewish family, Meyerbeer studied composition in Berlin and later at Darmstadt, where he formed a friendship with C.M. von Weber. His early German operas, produced at
- Beer, Sir Gavin Rylands de (British zoologist)
Sir Gavin de Beer was an English zoologist and morphologist known for his contributions to experimental embryology, anatomy, and evolution. Concerned with analyzing developmental processes, de Beer published Introduction to Experimental Embryology (1926), in which he noted that certain structures
- Beer, Wilhelm (German astronomer)
Wilhelm Beer was a German banker and amateur astronomer who (with Johann Heinrich von Mädler) constructed the most complete map of the Moon of his time, Mappa Selenographica (1836). The first lunar map to be divided into quadrants, it contained a detailed representation of the Moon’s face and was
- Beer-Lambert law (physics)
Beer’s law, in spectroscopy, a relation concerning the absorption of radiant energy by an absorbing medium. Formulated by German mathematician and chemist August Beer in 1852, it states that the absorptive capacity of a dissolved substance is directly proportional to its concentration in a
- Beerbohm, Max (British humorist)
Max Beerbohm was an English caricaturist, writer, dandy, and wit whose sophisticated drawings and parodies were unique in capturing, usually without malice, whatever was pretentious, affected, or absurd in his famous and fashionable contemporaries. He was called by George Bernard Shaw “the
- Beerbohm, Sir Henry Maximilian (British humorist)
Max Beerbohm was an English caricaturist, writer, dandy, and wit whose sophisticated drawings and parodies were unique in capturing, usually without malice, whatever was pretentious, affected, or absurd in his famous and fashionable contemporaries. He was called by George Bernard Shaw “the
- Beeren, Mount (volcano, Norway)
Jan Mayen: …a submarine volcanic ridge, and Beerenberg volcano (7,470 ft [2,277 m]), the last major eruption of which was in 1732, forms the Nord-Jan, the northeastern region of the island. The remainder, Sør-Jan, the southern region, is low and hilly. There are no harbours. The island is bleak and desolate, and…
- Beerenberg (volcano, Norway)
Jan Mayen: …a submarine volcanic ridge, and Beerenberg volcano (7,470 ft [2,277 m]), the last major eruption of which was in 1732, forms the Nord-Jan, the northeastern region of the island. The remainder, Sør-Jan, the southern region, is low and hilly. There are no harbours. The island is bleak and desolate, and…
- Beernaert, Auguste-Marie-François (Belgian-Flemish statesman)
Auguste-Marie-François Beernaert was a Belgian-Flemish statesman and cowinner (with Paul-H.-B. d’Estournelles de Constant) of the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1909. A lawyer by profession, Beernaert was elected to the Belgian Chamber of Deputies in 1873 and later served as minister of public works. He
- Beers, Clifford Whittingham (American author)
Clifford Whittingham Beers was an American author and influential figure in the field of mental hygiene in the United States. Beers was a graduate (1897) of Yale University who suffered severe episodes of depression and anxiety and was maltreated and abused during his confinement at various private
- Beers, Ethel Lynn (American poet)
Ethel Lynn Beers was an American poet known for her patriotic and sentimental verse, particularly the popular Civil War poem “The Picket Guard.” A descendant of John Eliot, the “Apostle to the Indians,” Ethelinda Eliot began at an early age to contribute to periodicals under the name Ethel Lynn. In
- Beers, George (Canadian sportsman)
lacrosse: History: …rules somewhat, and in 1867 George Beers of Montreal, called “the father of lacrosse,” made further changes that included replacing the Indian ball of deerskin stuffed with hair by a hard rubber ball, limiting the number of players on a team to 12, and improving the stick for easier catching…
- Beersheba (Israel)
Beersheba, biblical town of southern Israel, now a city and the main centre of the Negev (in Hebrew, Ha-Negev; in Arabic, al-Naqab) region. Beersheba is first mentioned as the site where Abraham, founder of the Jewish people, made a covenant with the Philistine king Abimelech of Gerar (Genesis 21).
- Beery, Noah, Sr. (American actor)
She Done Him Wrong: Cast:
- Beery, Wallace (American actor)
Wallace Beery was an American actor who played in more than 250 motion pictures between 1913 and 1949. Beery’s first job in entertainment was as an elephant trainer for the Ringling Brothers Circus. He later joined his brother, the actor Noah Beery, Sr., in New York City, where they both worked in
- Beery, Wallace Fitzgerald (American actor)
Wallace Beery was an American actor who played in more than 250 motion pictures between 1913 and 1949. Beery’s first job in entertainment was as an elephant trainer for the Ringling Brothers Circus. He later joined his brother, the actor Noah Beery, Sr., in New York City, where they both worked in
- Bees (American baseball team [1966–present])
The Atlanta Braves are the only existing Major League Baseball (MLB) franchise to have played every season since professional baseball came into existence. Founded in Boston in 1871, the franchise has moved twice: it began playing in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in 1953 and then in Atlanta in 1966. The
- Bees saal baad (film by Nag [1962])
Lata Mangeshkar: …deep jale kahin dil” from Bees saal baad (1962), for “Tumhi mere mandir” from the film Khandaan (1965), and for “Aap mujhe acchhe lagne lage” from the film Jeene ki raah (1969). She was awarded the Padma Vibhushan, one of India’s highest civilian honours, in 1999, and two years later…
- Bees, Battle of the (World War I [1914])
Battle of Tanga, the opening battle in German East Africa (Tanzania) on November 2–5, 1914, during World War I in which an amphibious landing at Tanga ended in total fiasco for the British. Failure to secure the harbor as a base for future operations ended hopes that the German colony would be
- Bees, The (poetry by Duffy)
Carol Ann Duffy: …the collections Love Poems (2010), The Bees (2011), and Sincerity (2018), and her stage credits included retellings of the story of Casanova (2007) and of the morality play Everyman (2015).
- Beeson’s Town (Pennsylvania, United States)
Uniontown, city, seat (1784) of Fayette county, southwestern Pennsylvania, U.S. It lies along Redstone Creek, among the rugged foothills of the Allegheny Mountains, 45 miles (72 km) southeast of Pittsburgh. Settled in 1768 and laid out (1776) by Henry Beeson, a Quaker, it was first known as
- Beeston and Stapleford (England, United Kingdom)
Beeston and Stapleford, urban area (from 2011 built-up area), Broxtowe borough, administrative and historic county of Nottinghamshire, central England. The community developed during the 19th century as a result of its proximity to the coal measures of western Nottinghamshire and the railways they
- Beeston’s Boys (British theatrical company)
Christopher Beeston: …Company, more popularly known as Beeston’s Boys, a company that was established by royal warrant. Beeston was a lifelong friend of Thomas Heywood and produced many of his plays and also contributed verses to Heywood’s prose work An Apology for Actors (1612).
- Beeston, Christopher (English actor and theatrical manager)
Christopher Beeston was an English actor and theatrical manager who was one of the most influential figures in the English theatre in the early 17th century. Nothing is known of Beeston’s early life. In 1598 he appeared in Ben Jonson’s Every Man In His Humour with William Shakespeare, Augustine
- beeswax
beeswax, commercially useful animal wax secreted by the worker bee to make the cell walls of the honeycomb. Beeswax ranges from yellow to almost black in colour, depending on such factors as the age and diet of the bees, and it has a somewhat honeylike odour and a faint balsamic taste. It is soft
- beet (plant, Beta vulgaris cultivar)
beet, (Beta vulgaris), one of the four cultivated forms of the plant Beta vulgaris of the amaranth family (Amaranthaceae), grown for its edible leaves and taproot. Beetroots are frequently roasted or boiled and served as a side dish. They are also commonly canned, either whole or cut up, and often
- beet curly top virus disease (plant disease)
curly top, viral disease affecting numerous cultivated and wild plants worldwide. Diseased plants are usually stunted or dwarfed and have thickened, yellowed, and bunched or curled leaves that frequently die early. Young plants often die quickly, and the disease can cause significant crop losses.
- beet leafhopper (insect)
curly top: …Europe, and Asia by the beet leafhopper (Circulifer tenullus) and in South America by Agalliana ensigera, which overwinter on wild plant hosts and in the spring migrate to sugar beet fields, their preferred hosts. The disease may be avoided by planting a thick stand as early as possible or when…
- beet pulp, sugar (product)
sugar: Washing and extraction: Some 98 percent of the sugar is extracted to form what is known as diffusion juice, or raw juice.
- Beet Queen, The (novel by Erdrich)
Louise Erdrich: … began a tetralogy that includes The Beet Queen (1986), Tracks (1988), and The Bingo Palace (1994), about the Indian families living on or near a North Dakota Ojibwa reservation and the whites they encounter. Tales of Burning Love (1996) and The Antelope Wife (1998) detail tumultuous relationships between men and…
- beet sugar (chemical compound)
sugar: Beet sugar: Beet sugar factories generally produce only white sugar from sugar beets. Brown sugars are made with the use of cane molasses as a mother liquor component or as a crystal coating.
- Beethoven (film by Levant [1992])
Saint Bernard: …films, most notably in the Beethoven franchise and in Walt Disney’s animated Peter Pan (1953), in which a Saint named Nana serves as the nursemaid to the Darling children. However, horror novelist Stephen King went against type in casting the normally gentle Saint Bernard as a rabid killer in Cujo,…
- Beethoven Piano Sonatas (musical compositions)
Beethoven Piano Sonatas, compositions by Ludwig van Beethoven. Although he was far from the first great composer to write multi-movement compositions for solo piano, he was, nonetheless, the first to show how much power and variety of expression could be drawn forth from this single instrument. For
- Beethoven, Ludwig van (German composer)
Ludwig van Beethoven was a German composer, the predominant musical figure in the transitional period between the Classical and Romantic eras. Widely regarded as the greatest composer who ever lived, Ludwig van Beethoven dominates a period of musical history as no one else before or since. Rooted
- Beethovenhalle (concert hall, Bonn, Germany)
Bonn: The Beethovenhalle, a modern concert hall, is the centre of Bonn’s musical life.
- Beetle (automobile)
automotive industry: Europe after World War II: …most emphasis centring on the Volkswagen. At the end of the war the Volkswagen factory and the city of Wolfsburg were in ruins. Restored to production, in a little more than a decade the plant was producing one-half of West Germany’s motor vehicles and had established a strong position in…
- Beetle (pontoon)
Mulberry: …steel or concrete pontoons (called Beetles). The roadways terminated at great pierheads, called Spuds, that were jacked up and down on legs which rested on the seafloor. These structures were to be sheltered from the sea by lines of massive sunken caissons (called Phoenixes), lines of scuttled ships (called Gooseberries),…
- beetle (tool)
hand tool: Hammers and hammerlike tools: …other names, such as pounder, beetle, mallet, maul, pestle, sledge, and others. The best known of the tools that go by the name hammer is the carpenter’s claw type, but there are many others, such as riveting, boilermaker’s, bricklayer’s, blacksmith’s, machinist’s ball peen and cross peen, stone (or spalling),
- beetle eater (bird)
caracara: …in South America include the chimango, or beetle eater (Milvago chimango), and the black caracara (Daptrius ater). The smaller South American species eat insects.
- beetle mite (arachnid)
acarid: Annotated classification: Suborder Oribatida (oribatid or beetle mites) Usually strongly sclerotized and slow moving, 0.2–1.5 mm in size; eyes and stigmata absent; pseudostigmata generally present, palps without claws, 3–5 segments; chelicerae usually chelate; rutella present; tarsi with 1–3 claws; ventrally with various shields; majority terrestrial in forest humus and soil, a…
- Beetlejuice (film by Burton [1988])
Tim Burton: With the dark comedy Beetlejuice (1988)—starring Alec Baldwin, Geena Davis, Winona Ryder, and Michael Keaton—Burton established himself as an unconventional filmmaker. He turned to more mainstream fare with the big-budget Batman (1989) and its sequel Batman Returns (1992). Both films were major hits.
- beetling
textile: Beetling: Beetling is a process applied to linen fabrics and to cotton fabrics made to resemble linen to produce a hard, flat surface with high lustre and also to make texture less porous. In this process, the fabric, dampened and wound around an iron cylinder,…
- Beeton, Samuel (British publisher)
history of publishing: Women’s magazines: …Magazine, a monthly issued by Samuel Beeton at twopence instead of the usual one shilling; it was also the first women’s periodical to concentrate on home management and offer practical advice to women rather than provide entertainment for the idle. Beeton’s wife (author of the classic Book of Household Management,…
- beetroot (plant, Beta vulgaris cultivar)
beet, (Beta vulgaris), one of the four cultivated forms of the plant Beta vulgaris of the amaranth family (Amaranthaceae), grown for its edible leaves and taproot. Beetroots are frequently roasted or boiled and served as a side dish. They are also commonly canned, either whole or cut up, and often
- Beets, Nicolaas (Dutch author)
Nicolaas Beets was a Dutch pastor and writer whose Camera obscura is a classic of Dutch literature. As a student at Leiden, Beets was influenced by reading Byron and was one of the first to write Romantic poetry. His poems—José (1834), Kuser (1835), and Guy de Vlaming (1837)—played a part in the
- BEF
British Expeditionary Force (BEF), the home-based British army forces that went to northern France at the start of World Wars I and II in order to support the left wing of the French armies. The BEF originated in the army reform of 1908 sponsored by Richard Burdon (later Viscount) Haldane. Prior to
- Befana (folklore)
Befana, in Italian tradition, the old woman who fills children’s stockings with gifts on Epiphany (Twelfth Night). Too busy to accompany the Three Wise Men on their journey to adore the infant Jesus, she said she would see them on their return. According to legend, they returned by another way, and
- before Christ (chronology)
biblical literature: The life of Jesus: …fact that Jesus was a historical person has been stressed, significant, too, is the fact that a full biography of accurate chronology is not possible. The New Testament writers were less concerned with such difficulties than the person who attempts to construct some chronological accounts in retrospect. Both the indifference…
- Before Dawn (play by Hauptmann)
Gerhart Hauptmann: …social drama Vor Sonnenaufgang (Before Dawn) made him famous overnight, though it shocked the theatregoing public. This starkly realistic tragedy, dealing with contemporary social problems, signaled the end of the rhetorical and highly stylized German drama of the 19th century. Encouraged by the controversy, Hauptmann wrote in rapid succession…
- Before I Go (film by Schaeffer [2021])
Robert Klein: Music and acting: …The Back-up Plan (2010), and Before I Go (2021). He also made scores of appearances in TV series, including a recurring role Sisters (1993–96).
- Before I Go to Sleep (film by Joffé [2014])
Colin Firth: …her memory in the thriller Before I Go to Sleep (2014). He deployed his starchy diction and composure to comic effect as a spy in the thriller parody Kingsman: The Secret Service (2014) and the franchise’s second installment, Kingsman: The Golden Circle (2017).
- Before Midnight (film by Linklater [2013])
Richard Linklater: Before Sunset, Before Midnight, and Boyhood: …film in the Before series, Before Midnight (2013), in which the Delpy and Hawke characters, now married with children, struggle with their commitment to each other. The film was well received, and the two actors and Linklater were again nominated for an Academy Award for best adapted screenplay.
- Before Night Falls (film by Schnabel)
Julian Schnabel: painter Jean-Michel Basquiat, and Before Night Falls (2000), about the Cuban poet and novelist Reinaldo Arenas. In 2007 Schnabel directed Le Scaphandre et le papillon (The Diving Bell and the Butterfly) and Lou Reed’s Berlin. The former, which won two Golden Globe Awards—one for best director and the other…
- Before Noon (work by Sender)
Ramón José Sender: Crónica del alba (1966; Before Noon), a series of nine novels published over more than two decades, explores the relationship between social and individual needs. In Las criaturas saturnianas (1968; “The Saturnian Creatures”) and other works Sender explores mythological and mystical subjects.
- Before Sunrise (film by Linklater [1995])
Richard Linklater: First films: Dazed and Confused and Before Sunrise: Linklater’s next film was Before Sunrise (1995), a romance in which two strangers (played by Julie Delpy and Ethan Hawke) meet on a train in Europe and spend one night together in Vienna discussing love and the vagaries of human nature. Linklater then directed a pair of forgettable studio…
- Before Sunset (film by Linklater [2004])
Richard Linklater: Before Sunset, Before Midnight, and Boyhood: …and Hawke reunited to create Before Sunset, a follow-up to their film from nine years earlier that sees the characters from the first film reunited for a short interlude in Paris. The sequel touches on many of the subjects discussed in Before Sunrise but in a more mature and disillusioned…