- Cishan (ancient site, China)
China: 6th millennium bce: The Cishan potters (southern Hebei) employed more cord-marked decoration and made a greater variety of forms, including basins, cups, serving stands, and pot supports. The discovery of two pottery models of silkworm chrysalides and 70 shuttlelike objects at a 6th-millennium-bce site at Nanyangzhuang (southern Hebei) suggests…
- Ciskei (former republic, Africa)
Ciskei, former republic (though never internationally recognized as such) and Bantustan that was inhabited principally by Xhosa-speaking people in Southern Africa. It bordered the Indian Ocean on the southeast and was bounded by the Republic of South Africa on the southwest, northwest, and
- CISL (Italian labor union)
Italian Confederation of Workers’ Unions, Italy’s second largest trade union federation. The CISL was formed in 1950 by the merger of the Free General Italian Confederation of Labour (Libera Confederazione Generale Italiana dei Lavoratori) and the Italian Federation of Labour (Federazione Italiana
- cisma de la Ingalaterra, La (play by Calderón)
Pedro Calderón de la Barca: Aesthetic milieu and achievement: …of His Own Dishonor) and La cisma de Ingalaterra (c. 1627; “The Schism of England”) are masterly examples of this technique, in which poetic imagery, characters, and action are subtly interconnected by dominant symbols that elucidate the significance of the theme. Although rhetorical devices typical of the Spanish Baroque style…
- Cisne, Islas del (islands, Caribbean Sea)
Swan Islands, two islets (Greater and Lesser Swan) in the Caribbean Sea, 97 miles (156 km) north of Honduras. Discovered by Christopher Columbus on St. Anne’s feast day in 1502, they were named Islas Santa Ana. The islands, only 1.6 square miles (4 square km) in area, served as a pirate haunt from
- Cisneros, Henry (American politician)
Henry Cisneros is an American politician who, as mayor of San Antonio (1981–89), was the first Latino to serve as mayor of a major U.S. city in the 20th century and who served as secretary of housing and urban development (1993–97) under U.S. Pres. Bill Clinton. Cisneros graduated from Texas A&M
- Cisneros, Sandra (American author)
Sandra Cisneros is an American short-story writer and poet best known for her groundbreaking evocation of Mexican American life in Chicago. After graduating from Chicago’s Loyola University (B.A., 1976), Cisneros attended the University of Iowa Writers’ Workshop (M.F.A., 1978). There she developed
- Cisneros, Villa (Western Sahara)
Río de Oro: Its principal town, Al-Dakhla (formerly Villa Cisneros), has a small port and must rely on imported drinking water. The Portuguese called the narrow inlet of the Atlantic Ocean at Al-Dakhla the Rio do Ouro (“River of Gold”), because the local inhabitants traded the gold dust of western Africa.…
- Cispadane Republic (historical territory, Italy)
Cispadane Republic, state formed in December 1796 by General Napoleon Bonaparte out of the merger of the duchies of Reggio and Modena and the legate states of Bologna and Ferrara. By the Treaty of Tolentino (Feb. 19, 1797), the pope also ceded Romagna to the republic. Deputies from the constituent
- Cissé, Soumaïla (Malian politician)
Mali: 2012 coup and warfare in the north: …Keïta and former finance minister Soumaïla Cissé, faced each other in a second round of voting, held on August 11. Keïta was victorious, winning almost 78 percent of the vote, and Cissé conceded defeat. Traoré handed power over to Keïta, who was sworn in on September 4, 2013.
- Cissus (plant genus)
Cissus, genus of about 350 species of tropical and subtropical, chiefly woody vines of the grape family (Vitaceae). The leaves are often fleshy and somewhat succulent. The species C. incisa, commonly known as ivy treebine, marine ivy, or grape ivy, is native to the southern and south-central United
- Cissus incisa (plant)
Cissus: incisa, commonly known as ivy treebine, marine ivy, or grape ivy, is native to the southern and south-central United States. It grows up to 9 m (30 feet) long and has compound leaves with three leaflets. The black fruit is about 2 cm (0.78 inch) in diameter. C. sicyoides,…
- Cissus sicyoides (plant)
Cissus: sicyoides, known as waterwithe treebine or princess vine, is native from southern Florida to tropical America and is especially noted for its abundance of long, slender aerial roots.
- cist (funerary object or place)
cist, prehistoric European coffin containing a body or ashes, usually made of stone or a hollowed-out tree; also, a storage place for sacred objects. “Cist” has also been used in a more general sense to refer to the stone burial place itself, usually built in the form of a dolmen, with several
- Cistaceae (plant family)
Malvales: Malvaceae, Cistaceae, and Muntingiaceae: Cistaceae, or the rock rose family, contains 8 genera and 175 species, which are commonly found in temperate or warm temperate areas, especially the Mediterranean region. Among the major genera in the family, Helianthemum (80–110 species) grows from Europe and North Africa to Central Asia…
- Cistercian (religious order)
Cistercian, member of a Roman Catholic monastic order that was founded in 1098 and named after the original establishment at Cîteaux (Latin: Cistercium), a locality in Burgundy, near Dijon, France. The order’s founders, led by St. Robert of Molesme, were a group of Benedictine monks from the abbey
- Cistercian style (architecture)
Cistercian style, architecture of the Cistercian monastic order in the 12th century. The order was an austere community characterized by devotion to humility and to rigid discipline. Unlike most orders of the period, under which the arts flourished, the Cistercians exercised severe restrictions on
- Cistercian ware (pottery)
Cistercian ware, lead-glazed English earthenware of the 16th century. Fragments of dark-red, hard earthenware with a black or iron-brown metallic-appearing glaze were designated Cistercian because they were excavated at Yorkshire Cistercian abbeys; the pottery predates the dissolution of the
- Cistercians of Common Observance (religious order)
Cistercian, member of a Roman Catholic monastic order that was founded in 1098 and named after the original establishment at Cîteaux (Latin: Cistercium), a locality in Burgundy, near Dijon, France. The order’s founders, led by St. Robert of Molesme, were a group of Benedictine monks from the abbey
- Cistercians of the Strict Observance, Order of (religious order)
Trappist, member of the reformed branch of Roman Catholic Cistercians founded by Armand-Jean Le Bouthillier de Rancé in France in 1664. The order follows the Rule of St. Benedict and consist of both monks and nuns; the nuns are known as Trappistines. To generate income, most Trappist monasteries
- Cistercium (France)
Cîteaux, village, site of a famous abbey in Côte-d’Or département, Burgundy région, France, south of Dijon. Founded in 1098 by St. Robert, abbot of Molesme, the abbey, largely through the activities of the 12th-century churchman and mystic St. Bernard of Clairvaux, became the headquarters of the
- Cistercium Abbey (abbey, Cîteaux, France)
Western painting: France: At Cîteaux the early manuscripts show evidence of strong Norman and English influence in their decoration and a satirical delight in observation (as in Gregory the Great’s Moralia in Job, 1111). Later, in a group of manuscripts of the second quarter of the century, the illustrations…
- cistern (engineering)
Western architecture: The early Byzantine period (330–726): Also distinctive were the underground cisterns, of which more than 30 are known in Constantinople today. They all took on the same character, with strong outer walls and roofs of small domes supported on tall columns. Some are of great size, some comparatively small. In some, like the great Basilica…
- Cistern of a Thousand and One Columns (reservoir, Istanbul, Turkey)
Western architecture: The early Byzantine period (330–726): …like the even more impressive Binbirdirek (Thousand and One Columns) cistern, new columns of unusually tall and slender proportions and new capitals of cubic form were designed specially. These cisterns assured an adequate supply of water even when the aqueducts that fed the city were cut by an attacking enemy.…
- cisterna (biology)
Golgi apparatus: …of flattened, stacked pouches called cisternae. The Golgi apparatus is responsible for transporting, modifying, and packaging proteins and lipids into vesicles for delivery to targeted destinations. It is located in the cytoplasm next to the endoplasmic reticulum and near the cell
- cisterna magna (anatomy)
human nervous system: Medulla oblongata: …cerebral aqueduct passes into the cisterna magna, a subarachnoid space surrounding the medulla and the cerebellum, via openings in the lateral recesses in the midline of the ventricle.
- cisternae (biology)
Golgi apparatus: …of flattened, stacked pouches called cisternae. The Golgi apparatus is responsible for transporting, modifying, and packaging proteins and lipids into vesicles for delivery to targeted destinations. It is located in the cytoplasm next to the endoplasmic reticulum and near the cell
- cisternal maturation model (biology)
Golgi apparatus: Models of protein movement: In contrast, the cisternal maturation model depicts the Golgi apparatus as a far more dynamic organelle than does the vesicular transport model. The cisternal maturation model indicates that cis cisternae move forward and mature into trans cisternae, with new cis cisternae forming from the fusion of vesicles at…
- Cisternay Du Fay, Charles François de (French chemist)
thermionic power converter: Development of thermionic devices: …early as the mid-18th century, Charles François de Cisternay Du Fay, a French chemist, noted that electricity may be conducted in the gaseous matter—that is to say, plasma—adjacent to a red-hot body. In 1853 the French physicist Alexandre-Edmond Becquerel reported that only a few volts were required to drive electric…
- cisticola (bird)
cisticola, any of about 75 species of the genus Cisticola, belonging to the Old World warbler family, Sylviidae. Some classifications group these species into their own family, the Cisticolidae. They occur in grasslands, thorny scrub, and marshes, most numerously in Africa but also across southern
- Cisticola exilis (bird)
cisticola: Like most cisticolas it makes a domed nest. The most common species from India to the Philippines and Australia is C. exilis, often called tailorbird, because it sews green leaves into its nest.
- Cisticola juncidis (bird)
cisticola: …most widespread example is the zitting cisticola, or common fantail warbler (C. juncidis), a reddish brown, streaky bird, 11 cm (4.5 inches) long, found from Europe and Africa to Japan and Australia. Like most cisticolas it makes a domed nest. The most common species from India to the Philippines and…
- Čistopol (Russia)
Chistopol, city and administrative centre, Chistopol rayon (sector), Tatarstan, west-central Russia. Formed in 1781 when the village of Chistoye Pole became the town of Chistopol, it is today a port along a large reservoir on the Kama River, just above its confluence with the Volga. The city’s main
- cistron (genetics)
Seymour Benzer: …genes and coined the term cistron to denote functional subunits of genes. He also did much to elucidate the nature of genetic anomalies, called nonsense mutations, in terms of the nucleotide sequence of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), the “gene substance,” and discovered a reversal, or suppression, of these mutations in certain…
- Cistus (plant, Cistus genus)
rock rose, (Cistus), any of a genus of 18 species of low to medium-sized shrubs, in the rock rose family (Cistaceae), native to the Mediterranean region and long known to horticulture. There are a number of garden hybrids useful in warm areas (mostly including C. ladanifer as one of the parents),
- Cistus incanus (plant, Cistus genus)
rock rose, (Cistus), any of a genus of 18 species of low to medium-sized shrubs, in the rock rose family (Cistaceae), native to the Mediterranean region and long known to horticulture. There are a number of garden hybrids useful in warm areas (mostly including C. ladanifer as one of the parents),
- Cistus ladanifer (plant)
rock rose: …in warm areas (mostly including C. ladanifer as one of the parents), where they are often grown in rock gardens. The large flowers are single and roselike, in white, pink, or rosy-purple, often with a yellowish or dark blotch at the base of the petals. The foliage is scented, often…
- Čita (former oblast, Russia)
Chita, former oblast (region), far eastern Russia. In 2008 it merged with Agin Buryat autonomous okrug (district) to form Zabaykalye kray
- Čita (Russia)
Chita, city and administrative centre of the former Chita oblast (region), far eastern Russia. In 2008 Chita region merged with Agin-Buryat autonomous okrug (district) to form Zabaykalsky kray (territory). The city lies at the confluence of the Chita and Ingoda rivers. It was founded in 1653 as a
- Citadel (film by Egoyan [2006])
Atom Egoyan: Egoyan also directed the documentary Citadel (2006), which follows his wife, actress Arsinée Khanjian, as she returns to her homeland of Lebanon for the first time in 28 years.
- Citadel (ancient courtyard, Teotihuacán, Mexico)
Teotihuacán: …of the avenue lies the Ciudadela (“Citadel”), a large square courtyard covering 38 acres (15 hectares). Within the Citadel stands the Temple of Quetzalcóatl (the Feathered Serpent) in the form of a truncated pyramid; projecting from its ornately decorated walls are numerous stone heads of the deity. The temple walls…
- citadel (architecture)
citadel, fortified structure that is often located within a city or town. While designed to protect or subjugate social groups, citadels often played a significant role in shaping culture. The word is from the Latin civitas ( “citizenship,” “the state,” or “city”) via the Italian cittadella (“small
- Citadel (stronghold, Budapest, Hungary)
Budapest: Buda: At the top stands the Citadel (Citadella)—built by the Austrian army in the mid-19th century in order to keep watch over the town—which serves today as a hotel and restaurant and doubles on St. Stephen’s Day (August 20) as the stage for a splendid fireworks display. The Liberation Statue near…
- Citadel, The (college, Charleston, South Carolina, United States)
The Citadel, public military college located in Charleston, South Carolina, U.S. All undergraduate daytime students, known as cadets, are required to participate in one of the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps programs. The college offers bachelor’s degree programs in business, education,
- Citadel, The (stronghold, Jerusalem)
Jerusalem: Architecture: The Citadel (with David’s Tower) beside the Jaffa Gate, which acquired its present form in the 16th century, was created over ruins from the Hasmonean and Herodian periods, integrating large parts of Crusader structures and some Mamluk additions. The large number of churches mainly represent…
- Citadel, The (film by Vidor [1938])
King Vidor: Stella Dallas, The Citadel, and Duel in the Sun: Vidor then helmed one of his best-remembered efforts, Stella Dallas (1937), an adaptation of Olive Higgins Prouty’s novel. Barbara Stanwyck essayed the role of a working-class mother who sacrifices her own happiness for that of her class-conscious daughter…
- Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina, The (college, Charleston, South Carolina, United States)
The Citadel, public military college located in Charleston, South Carolina, U.S. All undergraduate daytime students, known as cadets, are required to participate in one of the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps programs. The college offers bachelor’s degree programs in business, education,
- Citadella (stronghold, Budapest, Hungary)
Budapest: Buda: At the top stands the Citadel (Citadella)—built by the Austrian army in the mid-19th century in order to keep watch over the town—which serves today as a hotel and restaurant and doubles on St. Stephen’s Day (August 20) as the stage for a splendid fireworks display. The Liberation Statue near…
- Citadelle (work by Saint-Exupéry)
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry: …man appears in Citadelle (1948; The Wisdom of the Sands), a posthumous volume of reflections that show Saint-Exupéry’s persistent belief that man’s only lasting reason for living is as repository of the values of civilization.
- Citadelle Laferrière, La (fortress, Cap-Haïtien, Haiti)
Cap-Haïtien: …Sans-Souci and the fortress of La Citadelle Laferrière, both built by Henry Christophe and now in the National History Park; they were designated UNESCO World Heritage sites in 1982. The citadel, often called the Eighth Wonder of the World, was begun in 1804 and took 13 years and 200,000 former…
- Citation (racehorse)
Citation, (foaled 1945), American racehorse (Thoroughbred) who in 1948 became the eighth winner of the American Triple Crown—the Kentucky Derby, the Preakness Stakes, and the Belmont Stakes—and was also the first horse to win $1 million. In four seasons (1947–48, 1950–51) he won 32 of 45 races,
- citation (law)
summons, in law, document issued by a court ordering a specific person to appear at a specific time for some specific purpose. It is issued either directly to the person or to a law officer who must carry out the instructions. Often the purpose of a citation or summons is to require a person to
- Citation (aircraft)
Textron Inc.: …the company delivered its first Citation business jet. Following the decline in sales of piston-engine private aircraft beginning in the late 1970s because of U.S. liability laws, Cessna discontinued this previously profitable line in 1986 and focused exclusively on the business jet market. Revised liability legislation induced it to resume…
- Cité (fort, Carcassonne, France)
Carcassonne: The Cité has the finest remains of medieval fortifications in Europe.
- Cité Administrative (urban complex, Brussels, Belgium)
Brussels: City layout: …the historic city, is the Cité Administrative, built between the late 1950s and early ’80s and originally intended for national government functions. The complex’s austere international style drew much criticism, however, and its buildings were largely abandoned by the early 21st century. At that time, in a public-private venture, Brussels…
- Cité antique, La (work by Fustel de Coulanges)
Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges: Apart from La Cité antique (1864; “The Ancient City”), a study of the part played by religion in the political and social evolution of Greece and Rome, most of Fustel’s work was related to the study of the political institutions of Roman Gaul and the Germanic invasions…
- Cité Industrielle (urban plan)
Cité Industrielle, urban plan designed by Tony Garnier and published in 1917 under the title of Une Cité Industrielle. It represents the culmination of several philosophies of urbanism that were the outgrowth of the Industrial Revolution in 19th-century Europe. The Cité Industrielle was to be
- Cité Industrielle, Une (work by Garnier)
Cité Industrielle: …1917 under the title of Une Cité Industrielle. It represents the culmination of several philosophies of urbanism that were the outgrowth of the Industrial Revolution in 19th-century Europe.
- Cité, Île de la (island, Paris, France)
Paris: Île de la Cité: Situated in the Seine in the centre of Paris, the ship-shaped Île de la Cité is the historical heart of the city. It is about 10 streets long and 5 wide. Eight bridges link it to the riverbanks, and a ninth…
- Cîteaux (France)
Cîteaux, village, site of a famous abbey in Côte-d’Or département, Burgundy région, France, south of Dijon. Founded in 1098 by St. Robert, abbot of Molesme, the abbey, largely through the activities of the 12th-century churchman and mystic St. Bernard of Clairvaux, became the headquarters of the
- Cîteaux Abbey (abbey, Cîteaux, France)
Western painting: France: At Cîteaux the early manuscripts show evidence of strong Norman and English influence in their decoration and a satirical delight in observation (as in Gregory the Great’s Moralia in Job, 1111). Later, in a group of manuscripts of the second quarter of the century, the illustrations…
- Citellus (rodent)
suslik, any of the 13 species of Eurasian ground squirrels belonging to the genus
- CITES (international agreement)
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, international agreement adopted in March 1973 to regulate worldwide commercial trade in wild animal and plant species. The goal of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) is to ensure that international trade does
- CITGO (American company)
Occidental Petroleum Corporation: …oil discovery in 1973; acquired Cities Service Company in 1982 (though it sold off all of that company’s refining and marketing operations the next year); and acquired in 1986 the Midcon Corporation, which had one of the largest natural gas pipelines in the United States. In 1987 the company gathered…
- Cithaeron (mountains, Greece)
Cithaeron, mountain range in Greece, separating Boeotia from Megaris and Attica (Modern Greek: Attikí). Its western end reaches the Gulf of Corinth (Korinthiakós). The range has a maximum elevation of 4,623 feet (1,409 meters). In ancient times, the road from Athens to Thebes crossed the range via
- cithara (musical instrument)
kithara, stringed musical instrument, one of the two principal types of ancient Greek lyres. It had a wooden soundboard and a box-shaped body, or resonator, from which extended two hollow arms connected by a crossbar. Three, originally, but later as many as 12 strings ran from the crossbar to the
- Citharichthys (fish)
sanddab, any of certain edible, American Pacific flatfishes of the genus Citharichthys (family Paralichthyidae). As in other flatfishes, sanddabs have both eyes on the same side of the head; as in other paralichthyids, the eyes are usually on the left side. The most common species of sanddab is the
- Citharichthys sordidus (fish)
sanddab: …species of sanddab is the Pacific sanddab (C. sordidus), a brownish fish mottled, in the male, with dull orange. It grows to about 40 cm (16 inches) and 1 kg (2 pounds).
- Citharidae (fish family)
pleuronectiform: Annotated classification: Family Citharidae (large-scale flounders) Eyes either dextral or sinistral; anus on ocular side; gill membranes widely separated; dorsal and anal fin rays not shortened posteriorly. Length to about 30 cm (about 12 inches). 5 monotypic genera found in the Indo-Pacific and Mediterranean and off Africa and…
- citharinid (fish)
ostariophysan: Annotated classification: Family Citharinidae (citharinids) Deep-bodied, scales often denticulate (toothed), small mouth and teeth. Herbivorous. Aquarium and food fishes. Size to 0.9 metre (about 3 feet). 3 genera, 8 species. Order Gymnotiformes Body elongated; anal fin very long; electric organs present. 5 families, 30 genera and about 134 species.…
- Citharinidae (fish)
ostariophysan: Annotated classification: Family Citharinidae (citharinids) Deep-bodied, scales often denticulate (toothed), small mouth and teeth. Herbivorous. Aquarium and food fishes. Size to 0.9 metre (about 3 feet). 3 genera, 8 species. Order Gymnotiformes Body elongated; anal fin very long; electric organs present. 5 families, 30 genera and about 134 species.…
- cithera (musical instrument)
kithara, stringed musical instrument, one of the two principal types of ancient Greek lyres. It had a wooden soundboard and a box-shaped body, or resonator, from which extended two hollow arms connected by a crossbar. Three, originally, but later as many as 12 strings ran from the crossbar to the
- Citheronia regalis (insect)
regal moth: …devil caterpillar (larva of the royal walnut moth, Citheronia regalis) has a black-spined, green body and black-tipped red spines behind its head. It eats principally walnut, hickory, and persimmon leaves. The adult has yellow-spotted, olive-gray forewings with red veins and reddish-orange hindwings with yellow markings. The imperial moth (Eacles imperialis)…
- Citheroniidae (insect)
regal moth, (subfamily Citheroniinae), any of a group of moths in the family Saturniidae (order Lepidoptera) that are large and brightly coloured and occur only in the New World. The ferocious-looking but harmless hickory horned devil caterpillar (larva of the royal walnut moth, Citheronia regalis)
- Citheroniinae (insect)
regal moth, (subfamily Citheroniinae), any of a group of moths in the family Saturniidae (order Lepidoptera) that are large and brightly coloured and occur only in the New World. The ferocious-looking but harmless hickory horned devil caterpillar (larva of the royal walnut moth, Citheronia regalis)
- Citibank, N.A. (American bank)
James Stillman: …York’s National City Bank (now Citibank) made it one of the most powerful financial institutions in the United States.
- CITIC (Chinese state corporation)
Clive Palmer: …mines to the Chinese-government-owned corporation CITIC Ltd. (formerly CITIC Pacific). The deal, which was initially worth nearly $3 billion (Australian), included future royalties on any ore produced. Mineralogy further acquired coal mines in 2008 and a nickel and cobalt refinery in 2009. Critics alleged that Palmer’s mines contained only low-grade…
- CitiCar (automobile)
automobile: Electric: …the most successful being the CitiCar built by a Florida company, Sebring Vanguard, Inc. The CitiCar had a plastic, wedge-shaped, two-seater body over a welded aluminum chassis. Lead-acid batteries supplied power to a 3.5-horsepower General Electric motor. With about 2,600 built between 1974 and 1976 (and another 2,000 of its…
- Citicorp (American company)
Citigroup, American financial services corporation formed in 1998 from the merger of Citicorp (itself a holding company incorporated in 1967) and Travelers Group, Inc. Its headquarters are in New York City. Citigroup’s origins date to the early 19th century. In 1811 the U.S. Congress refused to
- Citicorp Center (building, New York City, New York, United States)
skyscraper: …of them, such as the Citicorp Center (1978) in New York City, featured lively and innovative space for shopping and entertainment at street level.
- cities
city, relatively permanent and highly organized centre of population, of greater size or importance than a town or village. The name city is given to certain urban communities by virtue of some legal or conventional distinction that can vary between regions or nations. In most cases, however, the
- Cities for a Small Planet (work by Rogers)
Richard Rogers: …these were later published as Cities for a Small Planet (1997). Rogers was knighted in 1991 and was made a life peer in 1996. In 2008 he was made a member of the Order of the Companions of Honour.
- Cities in Flight (series of novels by Blish)
James Blish: …first published novel of the Cities in Flight series, Earthman, Come Home (1955), set in the 4th millennium ce, which established the future world that would be the setting of the four-part series. Explicitly based on the historical theories of German philosopher Oswald Spengler about the life cycle of a…
- Cities of Peasants (work by Roberts)
urban culture: The neocolonial city: …equivalent role: Bryan Roberts in Cities of Peasants (1978) shows that the growth of Pentecostal and other Protestant sects in Guatemala fulfills needs for mutual support networks in poor neighbourhoods and for those without kin ties.
- Cities of the Interior (work by Nin)
Anaïs Nin: …interest in her earlier work Cities of the Interior (1959), a five-volume roman-fleuve, or continuous novel, which consists of Ladders to Fire (1946), Children of the Albatross (1947), The Four-Chambered Heart (1950), A Spy in the House of Love (1954), and Solar Barque (1958).
- Cities of the Plain (novel by McCarthy)
Cormac McCarthy: The trilogy concludes with Cities of the Plain (1998), which interweaves the lives of John Grady Cole and Billy Parham through their employment on a ranch in New Mexico.
- Cities of the Red Night (novel by Burroughs)
William S. Burroughs: Wild Boys (1971), Exterminator! (1973), Cities of the Red Night (1981), Place of Dead Roads (1983), Queer (1985), The Western Lands (1987), and My Education: A Book of Dreams (1995)—Burroughs further experimented with the structure of the novel. Burroughs (1983), by filmmaker Howard Brookner, is a documentary on the artist’s…
- Cities Services Company (American company)
Occidental Petroleum Corporation: …oil discovery in 1973; acquired Cities Service Company in 1982 (though it sold off all of that company’s refining and marketing operations the next year); and acquired in 1986 the Midcon Corporation, which had one of the largest natural gas pipelines in the United States. In 1987 the company gathered…
- Citigroup (American company)
Citigroup, American financial services corporation formed in 1998 from the merger of Citicorp (itself a holding company incorporated in 1967) and Travelers Group, Inc. Its headquarters are in New York City. Citigroup’s origins date to the early 19th century. In 1811 the U.S. Congress refused to
- Citium (ancient city, Cyrpus)
Citium, principal Phoenician city in Cyprus, situated on the southeast coast near modern Larnaca. The earliest remains at Citium are those of an Aegean colony of the Mycenaean Age (c. 1400–1100 bce). The biblical name Kittim, representing Citium, was also used for Cyprus as a whole. A Phoenician
- Citizen 63 (work by Boorman)
John Boorman: Early documentaries, first feature film, and Point Blank: …with his series of documentaries Citizen 63, which describe what the British citizen in 1963 was really like, rather than how he described himself. In 1964 Boorman directed The Newcomers, a popular six-part study of a couple from Bristol.
- Citizen Capet (king of France)
Louis XVI was the last king of France (1774–92) in the line of Bourbon monarchs preceding the French Revolution of 1789. The monarchy was abolished on September 21, 1792; later Louis and his queen consort, Marie-Antoinette, were guillotined on charges of counterrevolution. Louis was the third son
- citizen comedy (literature)
citizen comedy, a form of drama produced in the early 17th century in England. Such comedies were set in London and portrayed the everyday life of the middle classes. Examples include Ben Jonson’s Bartholomew Fair (1614) and Thomas Middleton’s A Chaste Mayd in Cheape-side
- Citizen Genêt (French emissary)
Edmond-Charles Genêt was a French emissary to the United States during the French Revolution who severely strained Franco-American relations by conspiring to involve the United States in France’s war against Great Britain. In 1781 Edmond succeeded his father, Edmé-Jacques Genêt, as head of the
- Citizen Genêt Affair (United States-French history)
Citizen Genêt Affair, (1793), incident precipitated by the military adventurism of Citizen Edmond-Charles Genêt, a minister to the United States dispatched by the revolutionary Girondist regime of the new French Republic, which at the time was at war with Great Britain and Spain. His activities
- citizen journalism
citizen journalism, journalism that is conducted by people who are not professional journalists but who disseminate information using Web sites, blogs, and social media. Citizen journalism has expanded its worldwide influence despite continuing concerns over whether citizen journalists are as
- Citizen K (film by Gibney [2019])
Mikhail Khodorkovsky: Citizen K, a documentary about Khodorkovsky’s life, was released in 2019.
- Citizen Kane (film by Welles [1941])
Citizen Kane, American film drama, released in 1941, that was directed, produced, and cowritten by Orson Welles, who also starred in the lead role. Citizen Kane is acclaimed by many critics as the greatest movie ever made. As a landmark work in the history of cinema, it ranks among the few films
- Citizen King (king of France)
Louis-Philippe was the king of the French from 1830 to 1848; having based his rule on the support of the upper bourgeoisie, he ultimately fell from power because he could not win the allegiance of the new industrial classes. Louis-Philippe was the eldest son of Louis-Philippe Joseph de
- Citizen of the World, or, Letters from a Chinese Philosopher, The (essays by Goldsmith)
Oliver Goldsmith: Life: …Ledger and were collected as The Citizen of the World in 1762. The same year brought his Life of Richard Nash, of Bath, Esq. Already Goldsmith was acquiring those distinguished and often helpful friends whom he alternately annoyed and amused, shocked and charmed—Samuel Johnson, Sir Joshua Reynolds, Thomas Percy, David…