- Calloway, Cabell, III (American composer and singer)
Cab Calloway was an American bandleader, singer, and all-around entertainer known for his exuberant performing style and for leading one of the most highly regarded big bands of the swing era. After graduating from high school, Calloway briefly attended a law school in Chicago but quickly turned to
- Calluna vulgaris (plant)
heather, (Calluna vulgaris), low evergreen shrub of the heath family (Ericaceae), widespread in western Europe and Asia, North America, and Greenland. It is the chief vegetation on many wastelands of northern and western Europe. The young juicy shoots and the seeds of heather are the principal food
- callus (osteology)
callus, in osteology, bony and cartilaginous material forming a connecting bridge across a bone fracture during repair. Within one to two weeks after injury, a provisional callus forms, enveloping the fracture site. Osteoblasts, bone-forming cells in the periosteum (the bone layer where new bone is
- callus (dermatology)
callus, in dermatology, small area of thickened skin, the formation of which is caused by continued friction, pressure, or other physical or chemical irritation. Calluses form when mild but repeated injury causes the cells of the epidermis (the outermost layer of the skin) to become increasingly
- callus (botany)
callus, In botany, soft tissue that forms over a wounded or cut plant surface, leading to healing. A callus arises from cells of the cambium. When a callus forms, some of its cells may organize into growing points, some of which in turn give rise to roots while others produce stems and leaves. Thus
- callus-tissue culture (horticulture)
horticulture: Grafting: Callus tissue culture—a very specialized technique that involves growth of the callus, followed by procedures to induce organ differentiation—has been successful with a number of plants including carrot, asparagus, and tobacco. Used extensively in research, callus culture has not been considered a practical method of…
- calm (wind force)
coral reef: Tropical water conditions: …in deeper water, during the calm periods of the rainy season, the saturation may fall to about 80 percent. Plant nutrients such as phosphate and nitrate show no seasonal change in quantity; both are present in very small quantities throughout the year. Constant mixing of the shallow sea prevents any…
- calmecac (Aztec school)
education: The Aztecs: At the calmecac, the school for native learning where apprenticeship started at the age of 10, the history of Mexico and the content of the historical codices were systematically taught. The calmecac played the most vital role in ensuring oral transmission of history through oratory, poetry, and…
- Calmette, Albert (French bacteriologist)
Albert Calmette was a French bacteriologist, pupil of Louis Pasteur, and codeveloper with Camille Guérin of the tuberculosis vaccine Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG). He also described a diagnostic test for tuberculosis, known as Calmette’s reaction. Calmette graduated in medicine in 1886 in Paris.
- Calmette, Albert Léon Charles (French bacteriologist)
Albert Calmette was a French bacteriologist, pupil of Louis Pasteur, and codeveloper with Camille Guérin of the tuberculosis vaccine Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG). He also described a diagnostic test for tuberculosis, known as Calmette’s reaction. Calmette graduated in medicine in 1886 in Paris.
- Calmette, Gaston (French editor)
Joseph Caillaux: Gaston Calmette, editor of the influential Le Figaro, led a press campaign against him. When Calmette threatened to publish love letters between Caillaux and his mistress, who was now Madame Caillaux, she fatally shot him. The trial—in which she was acquitted—dominated French public life and…
- Calmo, Andrea (Italian author)
Italian literature: Drama: …widely appreciated, is the Venetian Andrea Calmo, who showed a nice gift for characterization in his comedies of complex amorous intrigue.
- Calo (people)
Roma, an ethnic group of traditionally itinerant people who originated in northern India but live in modern times worldwide, principally in Europe. Most Roma speak some form of Romany, a language closely related to the modern Indo-European languages of northern India, as well as the major language
- Calobryales (plant order)
bryophyte: Annotated classification: Order Haplomitriales (formerly Calobryales) Leaves flattened and in three rows on an erect shoot arising from a colourless, subterranean, rootlike system that lacks rhizoids; sex organs lateral but near shoot apices; sporophytes with elongate seta; sporangium elongate, with elaters and thickenings on the jacket cell walls;…
- Calocedrus (plant genus)
conifer: Annotated classification: …to as cedars (such as Calocedrus, Chamaecyparis, Libocedrus, and Thuja), have flattened sprays of frondlike branches closely covered with scale leaves; considerable diversity in both the Northern (18 genera) and Southern (11 genera) hemispheres; 50 or more species of junipers (Juniperus) are widespread, exceeding even the pines in their coverage…
- Calocedrus decurrens (tree)
incense cedar, (species Calocedrus decurrens), ornamental and timber evergreen conifer of the cypress family (Cupressaceae). It is native primarily to the western slopes of the Cascade and Sierra Nevada mountain ranges of North America, at altitudes of 300 to 2,800 metres (1,000 to 9,200 feet). The
- Calochortus (plant)
mariposa lily, (genus Calochortus), genus of about 40 species of tuliplike perennial plants of the lily family (Liliaceae), native to western North America. Several species are cultivated for their attractive flowers. Mariposa lilies have simple or somewhat branched stems, 15 to 130 cm (0.5 to 4
- Calochortus eurycarpus (plant)
mariposa lily: Major species: White mariposa lily (C. eurycarpus) can form attractive masses in wildflower meadows of northwestern North America. Each white petal features a large purple spot. Sagebrush mariposa lily (C. macrocarpus) is one of the most common mariposa lilies of arid regions of the western U.S. The…
- Calochortus macrocarpus (plant)
mariposa lily: Major species: Sagebrush mariposa lily (C. macrocarpus) is one of the most common mariposa lilies of arid regions of the western U.S. The purple petals often have a green stripe, and the flowers are borne singly or in clusters of three.
- Calochortus nuttallii (plant)
mariposa lily: Major species: …in cultivation, among them the sego lily (Calochortus nuttallii), native to dry soil from South Dakota to Washington and south to Oregon and California. Its white flowers are variously marked with yellow, purple, and lilac. The edible corm of the sego lily was used for food by the early Mormon…
- Calogero, Lorenzo (Italian author)
Italian literature: Poetry after World War II: …Eugenio Montale; the Calabrian Symbolist Lorenzo Calogero, who has been compared to Stéphane Mallarmé, Rainer Marie Rilke, Dino Campana, and Friedrich Hölderlin; experimentalist Fernando Bandini, who was equally at home in Italian and Latin, to say nothing of his ancestral Veneto dialect; and Michele Ranchetti, who between 1938 and 1986
- calomel (chemical compound)
calomel (Hg2Cl2), a very heavy, soft, white, odourless, and tasteless halide mineral formed by the alteration of other mercury minerals, such as cinnabar or amalgams. Calomel is found together with native mercury, cinnabar, calcite, limonite, and clay at Moschellandsberg, Germany; Zimapán, Mexico;
- calomel electrode (chemistry)
acid–base reaction: Dissociation constants in aqueous solution: …a reference electrode, commonly the calomel electrode, serves to measure the actual hydrogen ion concentration, or the pH, of the solution. If E is the electromotive force (in volts) observed by the electrode, the equation giving the pH is as follows:
- Calonarang (mythology)
Barong: …in opposition to the witch, Rangda (also known as Calonarang). During a dance-drama that includes the famous kris (heirloom sword) dance, in which deeply entranced performers turn swords on themselves but emerge unharmed, Barong confronts Rangda in magical combat. Barong is brought to life by two dancers encased in an…
- Calonne, Charles-Alexandre de (French statesman)
Charles-Alexandre de Calonne was a French statesman whose efforts to reform the structure of his nation’s finance and administration precipitated the governmental crisis that led to the French Revolution of 1789. The son of a magistrate of Douai, Calonne held various posts in French Flanders and in
- Calonyction aculeatum (plant, Ipomoea alba)
Ipomoea: Major species: …the largest-flowering ipomoeas is the moonflower (tropical white morning glory; I. alba), a rampant perennial climber with 15-cm (6-inch) white, fragrant, night-blooming flowers. It contains a milky juice used for coagulating Castilla rubber.
- Caloocan (Philippines)
Caloocan, city on Dagatdagatan Lagoon (Manila Bay), central Luzon, Philippines, adjacent to northern Manila. Founded in 1762, it became a municipality in 1815. Caloocan suffered much damage during World War II. Now part of Greater Manila, it is a growing center of industrialization as well as a
- Calophyllum brasiliense (tree)
South America: Tropical and subtropical rainforests: Characteristic trees are, among others, jacareúbas (Calophyllum brasiliense), which is a tall tree with hard reddish brown wood used for heavy construction, araparis (Macrolobium acaciaefolium), abiuranas (Lucuma species), piranheiras (Piranhea trifoliata), and louros-do-igapo (Nectandra amazonum). Undergrowth is dense.
- Calophyllum inophyllum (tree)
Alexandrian laurel, (Calophyllum inophyllum), evergreen plant (family Calophyllaceae) cultivated as an ornamental throughout tropical areas. Alexandrian laurel ranges from East Africa to Australia and is often cultivated near the ocean; it is resistant to salt spray and has a leaning habit. Dilo, a
- Calopogon (plant genus)
Calopogon, genus of five species of terrestrial orchids (family Orchidaceae), native to North America and the West Indies. The plants are commonly found in bogs and swamps, though some grow in prairie habitats. They are occasionally cultivated as ornamentals. Members of the genus are perennials and
- caloric deprivation (pathology)
nutritional disease: Nutrient deficiencies: …significant nutrition-related disease is chronic undernutrition, which plagues more than 925 million people worldwide. Undernutrition is a condition in which there is insufficient food to meet energy needs; its main characteristics include weight loss, failure to thrive, and wasting of body fat and muscle. Low birth weight in infants, inadequate…
- caloric theory (physics)
caloric theory, explanation, widely accepted in the 18th century, of the phenomena of heat and combustion in terms of the flow of a hypothetical weightless fluid known as caloric. The idea of an imaginary fluid to represent heat helped explain many but not all aspects of heat phenomena. It was a
- calorie (unit of measurement)
calorie, a unit of energy or heat variously defined. The calorie was originally defined as the amount of heat required at a pressure of 1 standard atmosphere to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water 1° Celsius. Since 1925 this calorie has been defined in terms of the joule, the definition since
- calorie restriction (nutrition)
aging: Calorie restriction and longevity: The use of drugs designed to increase life span in humans is surrounded by ethical issues associated with the artificial prolongation of life. However, longevity researchers have identified certain dietary factors that influence the cellular and metabolic processes underlying age-related diseases…
- calorie, food (unit of measurement)
calorie: …use it to mean the kilocalorie, sometimes called the kilogram calorie, or large Calorie (equal to 1,000 calories), in measuring the calorific, heating, or metabolizing value of foods. Thus, the “calories” counted for dietary reasons are in fact kilocalories, with the “kilo-” prefix omitted; in scientific notations a capitalized Calorie…
- calorific value (energy)
coal utilization: Calorific value: Calorific value, measured in British thermal units or megajoules per kilogram, is the amount of chemical energy stored in a coal that is released as thermal energy upon combustion. It is directly related to rank; in fact, the ASTM method uses calorific value…
- calorigen (plant physiology)
cuckoopint: Pollination: …is triggered by a hormone, calorigen, originating in the male flower buds only under the right conditions.
- calorimeter (instrument)
calorimeter, device for measuring the heat developed during a mechanical, electrical, or chemical reaction and for calculating the heat capacity of materials. Calorimeters have been designed in great variety. One type in widespread use, called a bomb calorimeter, basically consists of an enclosure
- calorimetry (physics)
physiology: Metabolism: …20th century, studies of animal calorimetry verified these concepts in humans and other animals. Calorimetry studies showed that the energy produced by the metabolism of foodstuffs in an animal equals that produced by the combustion of these foodstuffs outside the body. After these studies, measurement of the basal metabolic rate…
- Caloris (impact basin, Mercury)
Caloris, prominent multiringed impact basin on Mercury. The ramparts of Caloris are about 1,550 km (960 miles) across. Its interior contains extensively ridged and fractured plains. The largest ridges are a few hundred kilometres long. More than 200 fractures comparable to the ridges in size
- Calosoma scrutator (insect)
ground beetle: The searcher, or caterpillar hunter (Calosoma scrutator), is a common, brightly coloured North American ground beetle about 35 mm (1.5 inches) long. Its green or violet wings are edged in red, and its body has violet-blue, gold, and green markings. This and related species of ground beetles are…
- Calosphaeriales (order of fungi)
fungus: Annotated classification: Order Calosphaeriales Saprotrophic; ascospores small; included in subclass Sordariomycetidae; examples of genera include Calosphaeria, Togniniella, and Pleurostoma. Order Chaetosphaeriales Saprotrophic; ascomata subglobose to globose; paraphyses sparse to abundant; asci unitunicate, may lack apical ring; included in subclass
- Calotes (reptile genus)
Calotes, genus of arboreal (tree-dwelling) lizards of the family Agamidae, remarkable for their extreme colour changes when excited. It is found in gardens and forests of India, Sri Lanka, Southeast Asia, and some Pacific islands. The taxonomy is uncertain, however, and about 21 species, differing
- calotropis floss (plant fibre)
akund floss, downy seed fibre obtained from Calotropis procera and C. gigantea, milkweed plants of the Apocynaceae family (formerly in Asclepiadaceae). Small trees or shrubs, these two species are native to southern Asia and Africa and were introduced to South America and the islands of the
- Calotropis gigantea (plant)
akund floss: …obtained from Calotropis procera and C. gigantea, milkweed plants of the Apocynaceae family (formerly in Asclepiadaceae). Small trees or shrubs, these two species are native to southern Asia and Africa and were introduced to South America and the islands of the Caribbean, where they have naturalized. The yellowish material is…
- Calotropis procera (plant)
akund floss: …downy seed fibre obtained from Calotropis procera and C. gigantea, milkweed plants of the Apocynaceae family (formerly in Asclepiadaceae). Small trees or shrubs, these two species are native to southern Asia and Africa and were introduced to South America and the islands of the Caribbean, where they have naturalized. The…
- calotype (photography)
calotype, early photographic technique invented by William Henry Fox Talbot of Great Britain in the 1830s. In this technique, a sheet of paper coated with silver chloride was exposed to light in a camera obscura; those areas hit by light became dark in tone, yielding a negative image. The
- Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation (Portuguese philanthropic society)
Lisbon: Cultural life: Another prominent cultural institution, the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation and Museum, presents music and ballet, exhibits other fine arts, and displays the broad-ranging personal collection of its eponymous benefactor, an Armenian oil-lease negotiator who lived in Lisbon from 1942 until his death in 1955. Culturgest, a multifunctional auditorium and exhibition centre,…
- Calouste Gulbenkian Museum (museum, Lisbon, Portugal)
Gulbenkian Museum, museum in Lisbon, Portugal, featuring a renowned and eclectic collection of ancient and modern art. The Gulbenkian’s collection was amassed by Calouste Gulbenkian during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. An Armenian oil magnate, Gulbenkian ranks among the world’s greatest
- Calouste Gulbenkian, Museo (museum, Lisbon, Portugal)
Gulbenkian Museum, museum in Lisbon, Portugal, featuring a renowned and eclectic collection of ancient and modern art. The Gulbenkian’s collection was amassed by Calouste Gulbenkian during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. An Armenian oil magnate, Gulbenkian ranks among the world’s greatest
- Calpak (American company)
Del Monte Foods: …brokerage house, incorporated itself as California Packing Corporation, or Calpak, and began marketing its products under the Del Monte brand. The new company then operated more than 60 canneries, some in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Alaska. In 1917 it acquired pineapple lands and a cannery in Hawaii and, in the…
- Calprenède, Gaultier de Coste, Seigneur de La (French author)
Gaultier de Coste, seigneur de La Calprenède was an author of sentimental, adventurous, pseudohistorical romances that were immensely popular in 17th-century France. To this rambling and diffuse genre he imparted vigour through swift-moving plots. After studying at Toulouse, La Calprenède entered
- calpulli (anthropology)
pre-Columbian civilizations: Social and political organization: …group referred to as a calpulli by the Aztec and translated as barrio (“ward”) by the Spaniards. Questions about the structure and function of this level of Aztec organization have caused a great deal of debate among Meso-American specialists. It is clear, however, that it was a physical and territorial…
- Calpurnia (fictional character)
Julius Caesar: Caesar’s wife, Calpurnia, alarmed by prophetic dreams, warns her husband not to go to the Capitol the next day. Then, as planned, Caesar is slain in the Senate on March 15, “the ides of March.” His friend Mark Antony, who has expediently shaken the bloodied hands of…
- Calpurnius Siculus (Roman poet)
Calpurnius Siculus was a Roman poet, author of seven pastoral eclogues, probably written when Nero was emperor (ad 54–68). Very little is known of Calpurnius’ life; the name Siculus may indicate Sicilian origin or may be a conventional indication of his literary debt to the Sicilian Theocritus,
- Caltabellotta, Peace of (Italian history)
Charles II: It was resolved by the Peace of Caltabellotta (1302), under which Charles agreed to give up his claim to Sicily during the lifetime of Frederick III of Aragon (ruled Sicily 1296–1337).
- Caltanissetta (Italy)
Caltanissetta, city, central Sicily, Italy. The city lies in the mountains west of the Salso River at an elevation of 1,929 feet (588 m). It is sometimes identified with the ancient cities of Gibil-Habib or Sabucino, but its recorded history does not begin until the Norman occupation (1086). The
- Caltech (university, Pasadena, California, United States)
California Institute of Technology, private coeducational university and research institute in Pasadena, California, U.S., emphasizing graduate and undergraduate instruction and research in pure and applied science and engineering. The institute comprises six divisions: biology; chemistry and
- Caltex (American business group)
Chevron Corporation: …Middle Eastern oil was formed—the Caltex group of companies, owned jointly by Socal and Texaco. Casoc was renamed the Arabian American Oil Company (Aramco) in 1944, and in 1948 Socal and Texaco sold shares in Aramco to other U.S. oil companies, most notably Standard Oil of New Jersey (later Exxon…
- Caltha palustris (plant)
marsh marigold, (Caltha palustris), perennial herbaceous plant of the buttercup family (Ranunculaceae) native to wetlands in Europe and North America. It is grown in boggy wild gardens. The stem of a marsh marigold is hollow, and the leaves are kidney-shaped, heart-shaped, or round. The glossy
- Calton Hill (hill, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom)
Edinburgh: The New Town: …east end of Princes Street, Calton Hill rises above the central government office of St. Andrew’s House (1939) and the adjacent Royal High School (1825–29), considered for a time in the 1990s as the site for the new Scottish Parliament. It is crowned by the 19th-century architect William Playfair’s City…
- Calukya dynasty (Indian dynasties)
Chalukya dynasty, either of two ancient Indian dynasties. The Western Chalukyas ruled as emperors in the Deccan (i.e., peninsular India) from 543 to 757 ce and again from about 975 to about 1189. The Eastern Chalukyas ruled in Vengi (in eastern Andhra Pradesh state) from about 624 to about 1070.
- Cālukya dynasty, Eastern (Indian dynasty)
India: The Deccan: …important of which were the Eastern Calukyas, ruling at Pishtapura (modern Pithapuram in the Godavari River delta) in the early 7th century; the Calukyas of Vemulavada (near Karimnagar, Andhra Pradesh); and the renascent later Calukyas of Kalyani (between the Bhima and Godavari rivers), who rose to power in the 10th…
- Calumet (American Indian culture)
Sacred Pipe, one of the central ceremonial objects of the Northeast Indians and Plains Indians of North America, it was an object of profound veneration that was smoked on ceremonial occasions. Many Native Americans continued to venerate the Sacred Pipe in the early 21st century. The Sacred Pipe
- Calumet City (Illinois, United States)
Calumet City, city, Cook county, northeastern Illinois, U.S. A southern suburb of Chicago, Calumet City lies on the Illinois-Indiana state border and along the Little Calumet River, southeast of Lake Calumet. The area was first settled in the 1860s by Hans Johann Schrum, a German immigrant who
- Calumet District (area, Indiana, United States)
Calumet District, heavily industrialized area, mostly in Lake county, northwestern Indiana, U.S. It lies along the southern shore of Lake Michigan, adjacent to southeastern Chicago. Following the establishment of steel plants in Gary at the start of the 20th century, the area developed from a
- Calumet Farm (horse farm, Kentucky, United States)
Warren Wright: …Thoroughbred racehorses, and proprietor of Calumet Farm.
- Calumet Sag Channel (channel, Illinois, United States)
Chicago: City site: …and Ship Canal by the Calumet Sag (Cal-Sag) Channel and to Lake Michigan by the Calumet River.
- Calumma parsonii (lizard)
chameleon: …chameleon in the world is Parson’s chameleon (Calumma parsonii), which may grow up to 69.5 cm (about 27 inches) long. On the other hand, the world’s shortest chameleon, the male nano-chameleon (Brookesia nana), can be as small as 21.6 mm (about 0.9 inch) long. Most chameleons, however, are 17–25 cm…
- Calumny of Apelles, The (work by Botticelli)
Sandro Botticelli: Mythological paintings: …of Classical antiquity is the The Calumny of Apelles (c. 1495), a subject recommended by Alberti, who took it from a description of a work by the ancient Greek painter Apelles. Botticelli also drew inspiration from Classical art more directly. While in Rome in 1481–82, for example, he reproduced that…
- Caluromyinae (marsupial)
woolly opossum, (subfamily Caluromyinae), any of five species of arboreal New World marsupials (family Didelphidae). Woolly opossums include the black-shouldered opossum (Caluromysiops irrupta), the bushy-tailed opossum (Glironia venusta), and three species of true woolly opossums (genus
- Caluromys derbianus (marsupial)
woolly opossum: Derby’s woolly opossum (Caluromys derbianus) is found in Mexico, in Central America, and along the Pacific slope of Colombia and Ecuador. The brown-eared woolly opossum (Caluromys lanatus) occurs from Colombia and Venezuela to Paraguay. The bare-tailed woolly opossum (Caluromys philander) occurs throughout northern and eastern…
- Caluromys lanatus (marsupial)
woolly opossum: The brown-eared woolly opossum (Caluromys lanatus) occurs from Colombia and Venezuela to Paraguay. The bare-tailed woolly opossum (Caluromys philander) occurs throughout northern and eastern South America. All have large, nearly naked ears, a long prehensile tail, and either a median stripe on the face or bold…
- Caluromys philander (marsupial)
woolly opossum: The bare-tailed woolly opossum (Caluromys philander) occurs throughout northern and eastern South America. All have large, nearly naked ears, a long prehensile tail, and either a median stripe on the face or bold markings on the back. The tail is not well furred in the bare-tailed…
- Caluromysiops irrupta (marsupial)
woolly opossum: Woolly opossums include the black-shouldered opossum (Caluromysiops irrupta), the bushy-tailed opossum (Glironia venusta), and three species of true woolly opossums (genus Caluromys). The black-shouldered opossum is found only in southeastern Peru and adjacent Brazil. The bushy-tailed opossum is rare, known from only 25 specimens and a few records based…
- Calusa (people)
Calusa, North American Indian tribe that inhabited the southwest coast of Florida from Tampa Bay to Cape Sable and Cape Florida, together with all the outlying keys. According to some authorities their territory also extended inland as far as Lake Okeechobee. Their linguistic affiliation is not
- călușari (dance)
Morris dance: …and Latin America, and the călușari of Romania. The wide distribution of such dances suggests an ancient Indo-European origin. A common feature of many of them is that of a group of dancing men attendant on a pagan god who celebrates his revival after death. Often the dancers wear white…
- calutron (scientific instrument)
nuclear weapon: Producing a controlled chain reaction: …mass spectrograph (later called a calutron), was exceeding expectations in separating uranium-235, and it was enlarged to a 10-calutron system capable of producing almost 3 grams (about 0.1 ounce) of uranium-235 per day.
- Calvados (department, France)
Basse-Normandie: …the northwestern départements of Orne, Calvados, and Manche. The northern and western shores of the region are washed by the English Channel. In 2016 the Basse-Normandie région was joined with the région of Haute-Normandie to form the new administrative entity of Normandy.
- Calvary (painting by Bassano)
Jacopo Bassano: …such frescolike canvases as his Calvary (c. 1538–40). About 1540, he was greatly influenced by the elegance of the Florentine and Roman Mannerists. He especially admired the graceful attenuation of Parmigianino’s figures, as can be seen in his “Adoration of the Shepherds.” But the robust modeling, vibrant colour, and thick…
- Calvary (hill, Jerusalem)
Golgotha, (from Latin calva: “bald head” or “skull”), skull-shaped hill in ancient Jerusalem, the site of Jesus’ Crucifixion. It is referred to in all four Gospels (Matthew 27:33, Mark 15:22, Luke 23:33, and John 19:17). The hill of execution was outside the city walls of Jerusalem, apparently near
- Calvary, Rock of
Church of the Holy Sepulchre: Indeed, the Rock of Calvary, where the Crucifixion is believed to have occurred, is encased in glass at the lavish Altar of the Crucifixion and is the most-visited area within the church. Whether it is the actual location, however, has been hotly debated. It cannot be determined…
- Calvatia (fungus)
Agaricales: Agaricaceae: Calvatia contains about 35 species, including the giant puffball (C. gigantea), which can be as large as 120 cm (4 feet) across.
- Calvatia gigantea (fungus)
basidiocarp: The largest basidiocarps include giant puffballs (Calvatia gigantea), which can be 1.6 m (5.25 feet) long, 1.35 m broad, and 24 cm (9.5 inches) high, and those of bracket fungi (Polyporus squamosus)—2 m in diameter. The smallest are single cells of the yeastlike Sporobolomyces.
- Calvé, Emma (French singer)
Emma Calvé was a French operatic soprano famed for her performances in the title role of Georges Bizet’s Carmen. Calvé spent her early years in Spain. She studied principally under Mathilde Marchesi, one of the most influential voice teachers of the era. A fine actress, she trained herself by long
- Calvert (county, Maryland, United States)
Calvert, county, south-central Maryland, U.S., consisting of a tidewater peninsula lying between the Patuxent River to the west and south and Chesapeake Bay to the east. Calvert Cliffs State Park towers over the bay, exposing fossils from the Miocene Epoch that are 15 to 20 million years old. The
- Calvert, Alan (American businessman)
physical culture: Weightlifting: …due to the efforts of Alan Calvert, a Philadelphia businessman who was inspired by Sandow’s performance at the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893. Calvert virtually started the “iron game” (as lifting weighted objects came to be called after the invention of iron weights) by founding the Milo Barbell…
- Calvert, Bernie (British musician)
the Hollies: January 5, 2019), Bernie Calvert (b. September 16, 1943, Burnley), and Terry Sylvester (b. January 8, 1947, Liverpool, Merseyside).
- Calvert, Cecilius (British statesman)
American colonies: Founding of the middle colonies: His son, Cecilius Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore, almost immediately succeeded to the grant and resolved to establish a colony where his fellow Roman Catholics could find peace. Early in 1634 the first shipload of Roman Catholic settlers chose a site at St. Marys on a tributary of…
- Calvert, Charles (British statesman)
Charles Calvert, 3rd Baron Baltimore was an English statesman who was commissioned governor of the American colony of Maryland in 1661 and succeeded as proprietor of the colony in 1675. Like his grandfather George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore, Charles Calvert was a Roman Catholic, and anti-Catholic
- Calvert, Frank (English archaeologist)
Heinrich Schliemann: Youth and early career: …met with the English archaeologist Frank Calvert, Schliemann published his first archaeological book, Ithaka, der Peloponnes und Troja (“Ithaca, the Peloponnese, and Troy”). In that work he argued what he had been convinced of by Calvert (whose name he conveniently eliminated from the discussion): that Hisarlık, in Asia Minor, and…
- Calvert, Leonard (British colonial governor)
Leonard Calvert was the first governor of Maryland colony. Leonard Calvert was the younger brother of Cecilius Calvert and the son of George Calvert, 1st Lord Baltimore. Upon George Calvert’s death in 1632, Cecilius inherited the family title and also became proprietor of the newly chartered Roman
- Calvert, Sir George (British statesman)
George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore was an English statesman who projected the founding of the North American province of Maryland, in an effort to find a sanctuary for practicing Roman Catholics. Calvert was educated at Trinity College, Oxford (B.A., 1597), and became secretary to Robert Cecil,
- Calvet, Rosa Emma (French singer)
Emma Calvé was a French operatic soprano famed for her performances in the title role of Georges Bizet’s Carmen. Calvé spent her early years in Spain. She studied principally under Mathilde Marchesi, one of the most influential voice teachers of the era. A fine actress, she trained herself by long
- Calvin and Hobbes (comic strip by Watterson)
Calvin and Hobbes, American newspaper comic strip that ran from 1985 to 1995, chronicling the high jinks of Calvin, a six-year-old boy, and his pet tiger, Hobbes. Calvin and Hobbes was renowned for its vivid portrayal of a child’s imagination. In creating Calvin and Hobbes, cartoonist Bill
- Calvin College (college, Grand Rapids, Michigan, United States)
Grand Rapids: institutions include Davenport University (1866), Calvin College (1876), Aquinas College (1886), Grand Rapids Community College (1914), and Kendall College of Art and Design (1928). Grand Valley State University (1960) is centred in nearby Allendale, and six of the university’s professional colleges—those of business, community and public services, education, engineering and…
- Calvin cycle (chemistry)
bacteria: Autotrophic metabolism: …the reductive pentose phosphate (Calvin) cycle, the reductive tricarboxylic acid cycle, and the acetyl-CoA pathway. The Calvin cycle, elucidated by American biochemist Melvin Calvin, is the most widely distributed of these pathways, operating in plants, algae, photosynthetic bacteria, and most aerobic lithoautotrophic bacteria. The key step in the Calvin
- Calvin, Genevieve (American law enforcement officer)
Melvin Calvin: In 1942 Calvin married Genevieve Jemtegaard, with later Nobel chemistry laureate Glenn T. Seaborg as best man. The married couple collaborated on an interdisciplinary project to investigate the chemical factors in the Rh blood group system. Genevieve was a juvenile probation officer, but, according to Calvin’s autobiography, “she spent…
- Calvin, Jean (French theologian)
John Calvin was a theologian and ecclesiastical statesman. He was the leading French Protestant reformer and the most important figure in the second generation of the Protestant Reformation. His interpretation of Christianity, advanced above all in his Institutio Christianae religionis (1536 but
- Calvin, John (French theologian)
John Calvin was a theologian and ecclesiastical statesman. He was the leading French Protestant reformer and the most important figure in the second generation of the Protestant Reformation. His interpretation of Christianity, advanced above all in his Institutio Christianae religionis (1536 but