- Camille (fictional character)
Camille, fictional character, the protagonist of La Dame aux camélias (1848; staged 1852) by Alexandre Dumas fils. Camille made her way in life as a courtesan, and her byname referred to the camellias she carried as a signal of her availability. Camille gives up her way of life after falling in
- Camille, Hurricane (tropical cyclone, southern and eastern United States [1969])
Hurricane Camille, hurricane (tropical cyclone), one of the strongest of the 20th century, that hit the United States in August 1969. After entering the Gulf of Mexico, the hurricane struck the Mississippi River basin. As the storm moved inland across much of the southeastern United States and
- Camillo de Lellis (Roman Catholic saint)
Saint Camillus of Lellis ; canonized 1746; feast day July 14) was the founder of the Ministers of the Sick. Along with St. John of God, Camillus became patron of the sick. The son of an impoverished nobleman, Camillo became a soldier of fortune and an inveterate gambler. In 1575 he was converted
- Camillo, Don (fictional character)
Don Camillo, fictional character, a pugnacious Italian village priest whose confrontations with his equally belligerent adversary, the local communist mayor Peppone, formed the basis for a series of popular, humorous short stories by Italian author Giovanni Guareschi. The character also figured in
- Camillus (United States statesman)
Alexander Hamilton was a New York delegate to the Constitutional Convention (1787), major author of the Federalist papers, and first secretary of the treasury of the United States (1789–95), who was the foremost champion of a strong central government for the new United States. He was killed in a
- Camillus of Lellis, Saint (Roman Catholic saint)
Saint Camillus of Lellis ; canonized 1746; feast day July 14) was the founder of the Ministers of the Sick. Along with St. John of God, Camillus became patron of the sick. The son of an impoverished nobleman, Camillo became a soldier of fortune and an inveterate gambler. In 1575 he was converted
- Camillus, Marcus Furius (Roman soldier and statesman)
Marcus Furius Camillus was a Roman soldier and statesman who came to be honoured after the sack of Rome by the Gauls (c. 390) as the second founder of the city. Camillus celebrated four triumphs and served five times as dictator of Rome. His greatest victory was as dictator in 396 bce, when he
- Camilo Cichero Stadium (stadium, Buenos Aires, Argentina)
Boca Juniors: …Cichero Stadium, which was renamed Alberto J. Armando Stadium in 2000 in honour of a former club president. Fans know it as La Bombonera (“the Chocolate Box”) because of its unusual structure, with curving, steeply banked stands on three sides and one underdeveloped stand on the final side. The ground…
- Caminetti v. United States (law case)
Mann Act: …prosecute such consensual sex following Caminetti v. United States (1917), in which the Supreme Court held that “illicit fornication,” even when consensual, constituted an immoral purpose under the Mann Act.
- Caminha, Adolfo (Brazilian author)
Brazilian literature: Emergence of the republic: …time are Aluízio Azevedo and Adolfo Caminha. Azevedo’s naturalist and somewhat melodramatic novels deal primarily with environmental determinism and denounce social evils. Three novels are representative of Azevedo’s contribution to Brazilian literature: O mulato (1881; “The Mulatto”), on racial prejudice, Casa de pensão (1884; “The Boarding House”), on the effects…
- Caminho de pedras (work by Queiroz)
Rachel de Queiroz: Her third novel, Caminho de pedras (1937; “Rocky Road”), is the story of a woman rejecting her traditional role and embracing a new sense of independence. As três Marias (1939; The Three Marias), her first work to be written in the first person, follows the lives of three…
- camino de los ingleses, El (film by Banderas)
Antonio Banderas: …camino de los ingleses (Summer Rain), an adaptation of an Antonio Soler novel about a group of teenage boys who have a memorable summer vacation. In 2010 he portrayed a dissatisfied art-gallery owner in Woody Allen’s light relationship drama You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger. Banderas worked again…
- Camino Galicia de la Rosa, Felipe (Spanish poet)
León Felipe was a Spanish poet known chiefly as a poet of the Spanish Civil War. After performing across Spain with a traveling theatre company, Felipe published his first book, Versos y oraciones de caminante (1919; “Verses and Prayers of a Traveler”), in Madrid. He worked for an extended period
- Camino Island (novel by Grisham)
John Grisham: The crime thrillers Camino Island (2017) and Camino Winds (2020) centre on a female writer.
- Camino Real (play by Williams)
Tennessee Williams: In 1953 Camino Real, a complex work set in a mythical, microcosmic town whose inhabitants include Lord Byron and Don Quixote, was a commercial failure, but his Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1955), which exposes the emotional lies governing relationships in the family of a wealthy…
- Camino Real (highway, Spain)
Camino Real, (Spanish: Royal Road), highway that in the 16th century connected the cities of Gijón, León, and Madrid, Spain; in Spain it has come to mean any important highway. In California a coastal highway called El Camino Real was built during the Spanish period (1542–1821) and finally extended
- Camino Real, El (highway, California, United States)
Camino Real: …California a coastal highway called El Camino Real was built during the Spanish period (1542–1821) and finally extended 600 miles (970 km) from San Diego to Sonoma. It connected the 21 missions and 4 presidios (forts) built beside or near it from c. 1769 to c. 1823. The present Pacific…
- Camino Winds (novel by Grisham)
John Grisham: …thrillers Camino Island (2017) and Camino Winds (2020) centre on a female writer.
- Camino, Carlos Ruiz (Mexican bullfighter)
Carlos Arruza was a Mexican bullfighter, the dominant Mexican matador and one of the greatest of any nationality in modern times. Born in Mexico of Spanish parents, he began as a professional torero at the age of 14 in Mexico City. He went to Spain in 1944 billed as “El Ciclón” and soon was ranked
- Caminsky, Irving (American director)
Irving Cummings was an American film director best known for his musicals, many of which featured Betty Grable or Shirley Temple. While a teenager, Cummings began appearing onstage, and he became a sought-after actor, frequently cast in productions that starred Lillian Russell. In the early 1910s
- Camisard (French Protestant militants)
Camisard, any of the Protestant militants of the Bas-Languedoc and Cévennes regions of southern France who, in the early 18th century, organized an armed insurrection in opposition to Louis XIV’s persecution of Protestantism. Camisards were so called probably because of the white shirts
- Camm, Sydney (British engineer)
Hurricane: …Hurricane emerged from efforts by Sydney Camm, Hawker’s chief designer, to develop a high-performance monoplane fighter and from a March 1935 Air Ministry requirement calling for an unprecedented heavy armament of eight wing-mounted 0.303-inch (7.7-mm) machine guns. Designed around a 1,200-horsepower, 12-cylinder, in-line Rolls-Royce engine soon to be dubbed the…
- Cammaerts, Émile (Belgian poet and writer)
Émile Cammaerts was a Belgian poet and writer who, as a vigorous royalist, interpreted Belgium to the British public. In 1908, when he was 30, Cammaerts settled in England, and his writings on English and Belgian themes included translations of works by John Ruskin and G.K. Chesterton into French.
- Cammarano, Salvatore (Italian librettist)
Il trovatore: Salvatore Cammarano, with additions by Leone Emanuele Bardare) that premiered at the Teatro Apollo in Rome on January 19, 1853. Verdi prepared a revised version in French, Le Trouvère, with added ballet music, which premiered at the Paris Opéra on January 12, 1857. Based on…
- Cammeyer, William (American businessman)
baseball: Professional baseball: In 1862 William Cammeyer of Brooklyn constructed an enclosed baseball field with stands and charged admission to games. Following the Civil War, this practice quickly spread, and clubs soon learned that games with rival clubs and tournaments drew larger crowds and brought prestige to the winners. The…
- Camnula pellucida (insect)
short-horned grasshopper: The clear-winged grasshopper (Camnula pellucida) is a major crop pest in North America.
- Camoëns, Luis Vaz de (Portuguese poet)
Luís de Camões was Portugal’s great national poet, author of the epic poem Os Lusíadas (1572; The Lusiads), which describes Vasco da Gama’s discovery of the sea route to India. Camões had a permanent and unparalleled impact on Portuguese and Brazilian literature alike, due to not only his epic but
- Camoens, Luis Vaz de (Portuguese poet)
Luís de Camões was Portugal’s great national poet, author of the epic poem Os Lusíadas (1572; The Lusiads), which describes Vasco da Gama’s discovery of the sea route to India. Camões had a permanent and unparalleled impact on Portuguese and Brazilian literature alike, due to not only his epic but
- Camões Prize (literary award)
Rachel de Queiroz: …1993 she was awarded the Camões Prize, the most prestigious and remunerative award given for Portuguese-language literature. In 1977 de Queiroz became the first woman to be elected to the Brazilian Academy of Letters. She was a member of the Federal Council of Culture from 1967 to 1985 and in…
- Camões, Luís de (Portuguese poet)
Luís de Camões was Portugal’s great national poet, author of the epic poem Os Lusíadas (1572; The Lusiads), which describes Vasco da Gama’s discovery of the sea route to India. Camões had a permanent and unparalleled impact on Portuguese and Brazilian literature alike, due to not only his epic but
- Camões, Luís Vaz de (Portuguese poet)
Luís de Camões was Portugal’s great national poet, author of the epic poem Os Lusíadas (1572; The Lusiads), which describes Vasco da Gama’s discovery of the sea route to India. Camões had a permanent and unparalleled impact on Portuguese and Brazilian literature alike, due to not only his epic but
- camogie (sport)
hurling, outdoor stick-and-ball game somewhat akin to field hockey and lacrosse and long recognized as the national pastime of Ireland. There is considerable reference to hurling (iomáin in Gaelic) in the oldest Irish manuscripts describing the game as far back as the 13th century bc; many heroes
- camomile (plant)
chamomile, any of various daisylike plants of the aster family (Asteraceae). Chamomile tea, used as a tonic and an antiseptic and in many herbal remedies, is made from English, or Roman, chamomile (Chamaemelum nobile) or German chamomile (Matricaria chamomilla). Several species are cultivated as
- Camonica, Val (valley, Italy)
Alps: Settlement: …and in the Aosta and Camonica Valleys in Italy. The latter valley is noted for some 20,000 rock engravings that leave an invaluable picture of more than 2,000 years of habitation.
- Camorra (Italian secret society)
Camorra, Italian secret society of criminals that grew to power in Naples during the 19th century. Its origins are uncertain, but it may have existed in Spain as early as the 15th century and been transported thence to Italy. As the Camorra grew in influence and power, its operations included
- Camorta (island, India)
Nicobar Islands: …islands of Car Nicobar (north), Camorta (Kamorta) and Nancowry (central group), and Great Nicobar (south).
- camouflage (biology)
concealing coloration, in animals, the use of biological coloration to mask location, identity, and movement, providing concealment from prey and protection from predators. Background matching is a type of concealment in which an organism avoids recognition by resembling its background in
- camouflage (military tactic)
camouflage, in military science, the art and practice of concealment and visual deception in war. It is the means of defeating enemy observation by concealing or disguising installations, personnel, equipment, and activities. Conventional camouflage is restricted to passive defensive measures. The
- CAMP (materials science)
materials science: Photoresist films: …solution is to use the chemically amplified photoresist, or CAMP. The sensitivity of a photoresist is measured by its quantum efficiency, or the number of chemical events that occur when a photon is absorbed by the material. In CAMP material, the number of events is dramatically increased by subsequent chemical…
- cAMP (chemical compound)
aging: Aging of neural and endocrine systems: A normal chemical in cells, cyclic adenosine monophosphate (AMP), is thought to be a transmitter of hormonal information across cell membranes. It may be possible to identify the specific sites in the membrane or the cell interior at which communication breaks down.
- camp (military)
camp, in military service, an area for temporary or semipermanent sheltering of troops. In most usage the word camp signifies an installation more elaborate and durable than a bivouac but less so than a fort or billet. Historically, the camps of the Roman legions are especially noteworthy. However
- Camp Beauregard (military base, Mayfield, Kentucky, United States)
Mayfield: …monument marks the site of Camp Beauregard (1861), a Confederate base during the American Civil War evacuated (1862) and then captured by Union forces after an epidemic killed more than a thousand Confederate troops. In December 2021 a tornado of at least EF3 intensity devastated a large portion of the…
- camp bed (furniture)
furniture: Bed: …a campaign, however, collapsible iron camp beds were more practical. Napoleon owned several and died in one on St. Helena in 1821. As a furniture form, the iron bed was a neutral framework built to support bedclothes and equipped with stanchions (upright supports) for curtains; it was light, transportable, and…
- Camp Concentration (novel by Disch)
Michael Moorcock: Atrocity Exhibition (1970); Thomas Disch’s Camp Concentration (1968), about an American military camp where political prisoners are subjected to experiments to increase their intelligence; and Brian Aldiss’s Barefoot in the Head (1969), about the aftermath of a war in which Europe had been bombarded with psychedelic drugs.
- Camp David (presidential retreat, Maryland, United States)
Camp David, rural retreat of U.S. presidents in Catoctin Mountain Park, a unit of the National Park Service on a spur of the Blue Ridge Mountains in Frederick county, northern Maryland, U.S. Camp David lies just west of Thurmont and 64 miles (103 km) northwest of Washington, D.C. The retreat, which
- Camp David Accords (Egyptian-Israeli history)
Camp David Accords, agreements between Israel and Egypt signed on September 17, 1978, that led in the following year to a peace treaty between those two countries, the first such treaty between Israel and any of its Arab neighbours. Brokered by U.S. Pres. Jimmy Carter (this author) between Israeli
- Camp de la mort lente, Le (work by Bernard)
Jean-Jacques Bernard: Bernard’s nondramatic writings include Le Camp de la mort lente (1944; The Camp of Slow Death), a description of the German concentration camp at Compiègne, in which he, as a Jew, was interned, and Mon ami le théâtre (1958; “My Friend the Theatre”).
- Camp de Thiaroye (film by Sembène)
Ousmane Sembène: Camp de Thiaroye (1987; “The Camp at Thiaroye”) depicts an event in 1944 in which French troops slaughtered a camp of rebellious African war veterans. Guelwaar (1993), a commentary on the fractious religious life of Senegal, tells of the confusion that arises when the bodies…
- camp fever (pathology)
typhus: Epidemic typhus: Epidemic typhus has also been called camp fever, jail fever, and war fever, names that suggest overcrowding, underwashing, and lowered standards of living. It is caused by the bacterium Rickettsia prowazekii and is conveyed from person to person by the body louse, Pediculus humanus humanus.…
- Camp Fire Boys and Girls (youth organization)
camping: Youth camping: …Great Britain in 1910), the Camp Fire Boys and Girls (U.S., 1910), and the Girl Scouts (U.S., 1912; patterned after the Girl Guides). Most other organizations concerned with young people, such as the Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA), the Young Women’s Christian Association (YWCA), and many others, also undertook camp…
- Camp Fire, Inc. (youth organization)
camping: Youth camping: …Great Britain in 1910), the Camp Fire Boys and Girls (U.S., 1910), and the Girl Scouts (U.S., 1912; patterned after the Girl Guides). Most other organizations concerned with young people, such as the Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA), the Young Women’s Christian Association (YWCA), and many others, also undertook camp…
- camp meeting (religion)
camp meeting, type of outdoor revival meeting that was held on the American frontier during the 19th century by various Protestant denominations. Camp meetings filled an ecclesiastical and spiritual need in the unchurched settlements as the population moved west. Their origin is obscure, but
- Camp of Slow Death, The (work by Bernard)
Jean-Jacques Bernard: Bernard’s nondramatic writings include Le Camp de la mort lente (1944; The Camp of Slow Death), a description of the German concentration camp at Compiègne, in which he, as a Jew, was interned, and Mon ami le théâtre (1958; “My Friend the Theatre”).
- Camp Sumter (historic site, Andersonville, Georgia, United States)
Andersonville National Historic Site, Confederate military prison for captured Union soldiers during the American Civil War, located in Andersonville, southwest-central Georgia, U.S. It was established as a national historic site in 1970 to honour all U.S. prisoners of war. The site preserves the
- cAMP system (biochemistry)
nervous system: Neurotransmitters and neuromodulators: Another system is the cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) system. In this chain reaction, receptor proteins activate linking proteins, which then activate the enzymes that synthesize cAMP. The cAMP molecules activate other enzymes that, in turn, activate ion channels.
- Camp X (military training school, Ontario, Canada)
Camp X, training school for covert agents and radio communications centre in Canada that operated close to Whitby, Ontario, during World War II. It was the first such purpose-built facility constructed in North America. Known officially as STS (Special Training School) 103, Camp X was one of
- Camp, Madeleine L’Engle (American author)
Madeleine L’Engle was an American author of imaginative juvenile literature that is often concerned with such themes as the conflict of good and evil, the nature of God, individual responsibility, and family life. L’Engle attended boarding schools in Europe and the United States and graduated with
- Camp, Marie-Thérèse de (British actress)
Maria Theresa Kemble was an English singer, dancer, and actress who married the actor and theatrical manager Charles Kemble. The daughter of a French family of musicians, Maria Theresa was taken to England as a small child. In 1786 she found an acting part at the Drury Lane Theatre. She continued
- Camp, Maxime du (French writer and photographer)
Maxime Du Camp was a French writer and photographer who is chiefly known for his vivid accounts of 19th-century French life. He was a close friend of the novelist Gustave Flaubert. An outgoing, adventurous man, Du Camp also pioneered in photography and published works in virtually every literary
- Camp, Walter (American sportsman)
Walter Camp was a sports authority best known for having selected the earliest All-America teams in American college football. More importantly, Camp played a leading role in developing the American game as distinct from rugby football. (Read Walter Camp’s 1903 Britannica essay on inventing
- Camp, Walter Chauncey (American sportsman)
Walter Camp was a sports authority best known for having selected the earliest All-America teams in American college football. More importantly, Camp played a leading role in developing the American game as distinct from rugby football. (Read Walter Camp’s 1903 Britannica essay on inventing
- Campa (ancient city, India)
Champa, city of ancient India, the capital of the kingdom of Anga (a region corresponding with the eastern part of present-day Bihar state). It is identified with two villages of that name on the south bank of the Ganges (Ganga) River east of Munger. Champa is often mentioned in early Buddhist
- Campa Arawak (people)
Arawak: These Campa Arawak, however, remained isolated from influences of the Andean civilizations.
- Campagna di Roma (plain, Italy)
Campagna di Roma, lowland plain surrounding the city of Rome in Lazio (Latium) regione, central Italy. Occupying an area of about 800 square miles (2,100 square km), it is bounded on the northwest by the Tolfa and Sabatini mountains, on the northeast by the Sabini Mountains, on the southeast by the
- Campagna vase
pottery: Porcelain: …Campaña vases (more properly spelled Campagna), distantly derived from Italianate copies of the Greek krater, were often decorated with landscapes by the brothers Robert and John Brewer and others. The Brewers were pupils of the topographical painter Paul Sandby.
- campagne (equestrian training)
dressage: …divided into elementary training (campagne) and the much more advanced haute école. Elementary training consists of teaching the young horse obedience, balance, and relaxation. Starting with the horse on a longe line, or training rope, and then under the saddle, the horse is taught basic and natural movements, especially…
- Campagnola, Domenico (Italian artist)
Domenico Campagnola was an Italian painter and printmaker and one of the first professional draftsmen. A pupil of the Paduan engraver Giulio Campagnola, Domenico did not follow Giulio’s stipple technique in his own work, preferring a looser touch and picturesque effect. Early in his career, he is
- Campagnola, Giulio (Italian artist)
Giulio Campagnola was an Italian painter and engraver who anticipated by over two centuries the development of stipple engraving. Much of his significance derives from this technique: a system of delicate flicks and dots with the engraving tool, by which he achieved subtle nuances in his modeling.
- campaign (politics)
interest group: Common characteristics and the importance of interest groups: …of financial support for election campaigns. In the United States the development of political action committees (PACs) after World War II was geared to providing money to candidates running for public office. In western Europe, campaign funding is provided by many interest groups, particularly trade unions for social democratic parties…
- Campaign ’08 (United States government)
On November 4, 2008, after a campaign that lasted nearly two years, Americans elected Illinois senator Barack Obama their 44th president. The result was historic, as Obama, a first-term U.S. senator, became, when he was inaugurated on January 20, 2009, the country’s first African American
- Campaign ’12 (United States government)
American voters went to the polls on November 6, 2012, to determine—for the 57th time—their country’s president for the next four years. Incumbent Democratic President Barack Obama’s reelection bid was, from the outset, expected to be closely contested as the United States faced a number of
- Campaign 2008 (United States government)
On November 4, 2008, after a campaign that lasted nearly two years, Americans elected Illinois senator Barack Obama their 44th president. The result was historic, as Obama, a first-term U.S. senator, became, when he was inaugurated on January 20, 2009, the country’s first African American
- Campaign 2012 (United States government)
American voters went to the polls on November 6, 2012, to determine—for the 57th time—their country’s president for the next four years. Incumbent Democratic President Barack Obama’s reelection bid was, from the outset, expected to be closely contested as the United States faced a number of
- campaign commercial (politics)
Television in the United States: The political commercial: Some optimists in the early 1950s saw television as a potentially powerful force in achieving the Jeffersonian ideal of an informed electorate. The medium held the possibility of educating the entire voting population on the candidates’ stance on the issues of the day. Citizens…
- campaign finance (politics)
campaign finance, raising and spending of money intended to influence a political vote, such as the election of a candidate or a referendum. Political parties and candidates require money to publicize their electoral platforms and to pursue effective campaigns. Attempts to regulate campaign finance
- campaign finance reform (American politics)
John McCain: Political career: …McCain became a champion of campaign finance reform; he collaborated with the liberal Democratic senator Russ Feingold of Wisconsin, and, after a seven-year battle, the pair saw the McCain-Feingold Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act signed into law in 2002. The legislation, which restricted the political parties’ use of funds not subject…
- campaign furniture (furniture)
campaign furniture, in Europe, variety of portable furniture made for travel. Most of the surviving examples date from the 19th century and were made for Napoleon’s campaigns; they include such items as small chests, folding seats, and washstands in three tiers resting on metal supports that could
- Campaign of France, 1814 (work by Meissonier)
Ernest Meissonier: …III at Solferino (1863) and 1814 (1864), both of which celebrate heroic military campaigns, but he also captured the horrors of conflict in works such as Remembrance of Civil War (1848–49), which depicts the moment when the Parisian insurgents of 1848 were slaughtered on barracades by the Republican Guard.
- Campaign Reform Act (United States [2002])
Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA), U.S. legislation that was the first major amendment of the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 (FECA) since the extensive 1974 amendments that followed the Watergate scandal. The primary purpose of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (BCRA) was to
- Campaign Talk: Why Elections Are Good for Us (work by Hart)
Roderick P. Hart: In Campaign Talk, Hart employed his DICTION program to analyze the political voices of presidential candidates, journalists, and citizens as they appeared in campaign discourse (speeches, debates, television advertisements, television and print news coverage, and letters to the editor in local newspapers) over the course of…
- Campaign, The (poem by Addison)
Joseph Addison: Government service: The Campaign, addressed to Marlborough, was published on December 14 (though dated 1705). By its rejection of conventional classical imagery and its effective portrayal of Marlborough’s military genius, it was an immediate success that perfectly expressed the nation’s great hour of victory.
- Campaign, The (work by Fuentes)
Latin American literature: Post-boom writers: …instance, published La campaña (1990; The Campaign), an excellent novel about the independence period in Latin America, and Vargas Llosa wrote La fiesta del chivo (2000; The Feast of the Goat), dealing with Rafael Trujillo’s dictatorship in the Dominican Republic. Both are remarkable not only because of their literary quality…
- Campaign, The (film by Roach [2012])
Will Ferrell: …Mexican telenovelas; the political satire The Campaign (2012); and Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues (2013). The production company was also behind Funny or Die (funnyordie.com), a Web site that first garnered notice with a short video of Ferrell being intimidated by his landlady, a beer-swigging potty-mouthed toddler.
- campaign-finance laws, United States
United States campaign-finance laws, in the United States, laws that regulate the amounts of money political candidates or parties may receive from individuals or organizations and the cumulative amounts that individuals or organizations can donate. Such laws also define who is eligible to make
- Campaigne, Philippe de (French painter)
Western painting: France: But Philippe de Campaigne evolved a grave and sober Baroque style that had its roots in the paintings of Rubens and Van Dyck rather than in Italy. Clear lighting and cool colours with an austere naturalism provided an alternative to the intellectual and archaeological classicism of…
- Campaldino, Battle of (Italian history)
Battle of Campaldino, (June 11, 1289), in Italian history, a battle between Florence and Arezzo, an episode in the struggles among rival Tuscan towns and in the contest between the Guelfs and Ghibellines (pro-papal and pro-imperial parties in Italy). The battle marked the beginning of the hegemony
- Campan, Jeanne-Louise-Henriette Genest (French educator)
Jeanne-Louise-Henriette Genest Campan was a preeminent educator of Napoleonic France and champion of a broader curriculum for women students. Madame Campan served as lady-in-waiting to Marie-Antoinette from 1774 to 1792. But it was her friendship with Napoleon and especially her reputation as a
- campana (musical instrument)
bell, hollow vessel usually of metal, but sometimes of horn, wood, glass, or clay, struck near the rim by an interior clapper or exterior hammer or mallet to produce a ringing sound. Bells may be categorized as idiophones, instruments sounding by the vibration of resonant solid material, and more
- Campana vase
pottery: Porcelain: …Campaña vases (more properly spelled Campagna), distantly derived from Italianate copies of the Greek krater, were often decorated with landscapes by the brothers Robert and John Brewer and others. The Brewers were pupils of the topographical painter Paul Sandby.
- Campana, Dino (Italian poet)
Dino Campana was an innovative Italian lyric poet who is almost as well known for his tragic, flamboyant personality as for his controversial writings. Campana began to show signs of mental instability in his early teens. He studied chemistry intermittently at the University of Bologna but failed
- campaña, La (work by Fuentes)
Latin American literature: Post-boom writers: …instance, published La campaña (1990; The Campaign), an excellent novel about the independence period in Latin America, and Vargas Llosa wrote La fiesta del chivo (2000; The Feast of the Goat), dealing with Rafael Trujillo’s dictatorship in the Dominican Republic. Both are remarkable not only because of their literary quality…
- Campaña, Pedro (Flemish painter)
Pieter de Kempeneer was a Flemish religious painter and designer of tapestries, chiefly active in Sevilla, Spain, where he was called Pedro Campaña. By 1537 he had settled in Sevilla and apparently remained there until shortly before 1563, when he was appointed director of the tapestry factory in
- Campanella’s City of the Sun (work by Campanella)
Tommaso Campanella: …wrote his celebrated utopian work, La città del sole. His ideal commonwealth was to be governed by men enlightened by reason, with every man’s work designed to contribute to the good of the community. Private property, undue wealth, and poverty would be nonexistent, for no man would be permitted more…
- Campanella, Campy (American athlete)
Roy Campanella was an American baseball player who, as a catcher for the Brooklyn Dodgers of the National League, was among the first African American players to play in the major leagues. He was considered one of the game’s leading catchers, but his career was cut short as a result of an
- Campanella, Giovanni Domenico (Italian philosopher and poet)
Tommaso Campanella was an Italian philosopher and writer who sought to reconcile Renaissance humanism with Roman Catholic theology. He is best remembered for his socialistic work La città del sole (1602; “The City of the Sun”), written while he was a prisoner of the Spanish crown (1599–1626).
- campanella, La (work by Paganini)
La campanella, final movement of the Violin Concerto No. 2 in B Minor, Op. 7, by Italian composer and violinist Niccolò Paganini, renowned for its intricate and technically demanding solo passages and for the bell-like effects featured in both the solo and orchestral parts. The movement derives its
- Campanella, Roy (American athlete)
Roy Campanella was an American baseball player who, as a catcher for the Brooklyn Dodgers of the National League, was among the first African American players to play in the major leagues. He was considered one of the game’s leading catchers, but his career was cut short as a result of an
- Campanella, Tommaso (Italian philosopher and poet)
Tommaso Campanella was an Italian philosopher and writer who sought to reconcile Renaissance humanism with Roman Catholic theology. He is best remembered for his socialistic work La città del sole (1602; “The City of the Sun”), written while he was a prisoner of the Spanish crown (1599–1626).
- Campani, Giuseppe (Italian inventor)
Giuseppe Campani was an Italian optical-instrument maker who invented a lens-grinding lathe. Of peasant origin, Campani as a young man studied in Rome. There he learned to grind lenses and, with his two brothers, invented a silent night clock that, when presented to Pope Alexander VII, brought him
- Campania (region, Italy)
Campania, regione, southern Italy, on the Tyrrhenian Sea between the Garigliano (Lower Liri) River (north) and the Gulf of Policastro (south). The region comprises the provinces of Avellino, Benevento, Caserta, Napoli, and Salerno. Campania is mountainous and hilly, the Neapolitan Apennines in the