- Campanian Apennines (mountain range, Italy)
Apennine Range: Physiography: …feet at Mount Corno; the Campanian Apennines, 7,352 feet at Mount Meta; the Lucanian Apennines, 7,438 feet at Mount Pollino; the Calabrian Apennines, 6,414 feet at Mount Alto; and, finally, the Sicilian Range, 10,902 feet at Mount Etna. The ranges in Puglia (the “boot heel” of the peninsula)
- Campanian Stage (geology)
Campanian Stage, fifth of six main divisions (in ascending order) in the Upper Cretaceous Series, representing rocks deposited worldwide during the Campanian Age, which occurred 83.6 million to 72.1 million years ago during the Cretaceous Period. Rocks of the Campanian Stage overlie those of the
- campaniform organ (insect anatomy)
insect: Touch: …organs in the cuticle called campaniform organs detect bending strains in the integument. Such organs exist in the wings and enable the insect to control flight movements. Campaniform organs, well developed in small clublike halteres (the modified hind wings of dipterans), serve as strain gauges and enable the fly to…
- Campanile (tower, Venice, Italy)
San Marco Basilica: The Campanile, separated from the church, was originally begun under the doge Pietro Tribuno (died 912). It was adapted into its present familiar form early in the 16th century. In 1902 it collapsed, but by 1912 it had been rebuilt on its original site.
- campanile (architecture)
campanile, bell tower, usually built beside or attached to a church; the word is most often used in connection with Italian architecture. The earliest campaniles, variously dated from the 6th to the 10th century, were plain round towers with a few small, round-arched openings grouped near the top.
- campanilismo (sociology)
Italy: Characteristics of the period: …down the overwhelming spirit of campanilismo (local patriotism; the spirit of “our campanile is taller than yours”) during the 14th and 15th centuries. Only a minority of people living at that time could ever have heard the word “Italia,” and loyalties were predominantly provincial. It is true that among certain…
- Campanini, Barberina (dancer)
Western dance: Early virtuosos of the dance: …surpassed by the Italian dancer Barberina Campanini (1721–99), whose fame is less adequately recorded in dance history. By 1739, she had taken Paris by storm, demonstrating jumps and turns executed with a speed and brilliance hitherto unknown. She offered ample proof that the Italian school of dance teaching had by…
- campanology (English music)
change ringing, traditional English art of ringing a set of tower bells in an intricate series of changes, or mathematical permutations (different orderings in the ringing sequence), by pulling ropes attached to bell wheels. On five, six, or seven bells, a peal is the maximum number of permutations
- Campantar (Hindu poet)
South Asian arts: Bhakti poetry: …important Nāyaṉārs were Appar and Campantar, in the 7th century, and Cuntarar, in the 8th. Appar, a self-mortifying Jain ascetic before he became a Śaiva saint, sings of his conversion to a religion of love, surprised by the Lord stealing into his heart. After him, the term tēvāram (“private worship”)…
- Campanula (plant)
bellflower, (genus Campanula), any of around 420 annual, perennial, and biennial herbs that compose the genus Campanula (family Campanulaceae). Bellflowers have characteristically bell-shaped, usually blue flowers, and many are cultivated as garden ornamentals. They are native mainly to northern
- Campanula americana (plant)
bellflower: Tall bellflower, or American bellflower (Campanula americana, formerly Campanulastrum americanum), is found in the moist woodlands of North America and has flowering spikes that may reach 2 m (6 feet) high with saucer-shaped flowers bearing long curved styles. Tussock bellflower, or Carpathian harebell (C. carpatica),…
- Campanula carpatica (plant)
bellflower: Tussock bellflower, or Carpathian harebell (C. carpatica), has lavender to white bowl-shaped, long-stalked flowers and forms clumps in eastern European meadows and woodlands. Fairy thimbles (C. cochleariifolia), named for its deep nodding blue to white bells, forms loosely open mats on alpine screes. Bethlehem stars…
- Campanula cochleariifolia (herb)
bellflower: Fairy thimbles (C. cochleariifolia), named for its deep nodding blue to white bells, forms loosely open mats on alpine screes. Bethlehem stars (C. isophylla), a trailing Italian species often grown as a pot plant, bears sprays of star-shaped violet, blue, or white flowers. Canterbury bell…
- Campanula isophylla (plant)
bellflower: Bethlehem stars (C. isophylla), a trailing Italian species often grown as a pot plant, bears sprays of star-shaped violet, blue, or white flowers. Canterbury bell (C. medium), a southern European biennial, has large pink, blue, or white spikes of cup-shaped flowers. Peach-leaved bellflower (C. persicifolia),…
- Campanula medium (plant)
bellflower: Canterbury bell (C. medium), a southern European biennial, has large pink, blue, or white spikes of cup-shaped flowers. Peach-leaved bellflower (C. persicifolia), found in Eurasian woodlands and meadows, produces slender-stemmed spikes, 30 to 90 cm (12 to 35 inches) tall, of long-stalked outward-facing bells. Rampion…
- Campanula persicifolia (plant)
bellflower: Peach-leaved bellflower (C. persicifolia), found in Eurasian woodlands and meadows, produces slender-stemmed spikes, 30 to 90 cm (12 to 35 inches) tall, of long-stalked outward-facing bells. Rampion (C. rapunculus) is a Eurasian and North African biennial grown for its turniplike roots and leaves, which are…
- Campanula rapunculoides (plant)
bellflower: Rover, or creeping, bellflower (C. rapunculoides) is a European plant that has become naturalized in North America and is named for its spreading rhizomes. Throatwort, or bats-in-the-belfry (C. trachelium), a coarse, erect, hairy Eurasian plant also naturalized in North America, bears clusters of lilac-coloured funnel-shaped…
- Campanula rapunculus (plant species)
bellflower: Rampion (C. rapunculus) is a Eurasian and North African biennial grown for its turniplike roots and leaves, which are eaten in salads for their biting flavour. It produces ascending clusters of long-stalked lilac bells and has basal, broadly oval leaves that form a rosette around…
- Campanula rotundifolia (plant)
harebell, (Campanula rotundifolia), widespread, slender-stemmed perennial of the family Campanulaceae. The harebell bears nodding blue bell-like flowers. It is native to woods, meadows, and cliffsides of northern Eurasia and North America and of mountains farther south. There are more than 30 named
- Campanula trachelium (plant)
bellflower: Throatwort, or bats-in-the-belfry (C. trachelium), a coarse, erect, hairy Eurasian plant also naturalized in North America, bears clusters of lilac-coloured funnel-shaped flowers. Other cultivated Campanula species from Europe include Adria bellflower (C. garganica, sometimes classified as a variety of C. elatines); clustered bellflower (C. glomerata);…
- Campanulaceae (plant family)
Campanulaceae, the bellflower family, containing 84 genera and about 2,400 species of mostly herbaceous (nonwoody) plants, many with showy, blue, bell-like flowers. The plants are mainly important as garden ornamentals. They are mostly native to cool, temperate areas but also occur on mountains in
- campanulid (plant clade)
angiosperm: Annotated classification: Campanulids The following 7 orders. Order Apiales Families: Apiaceae, Araliaceae, Griseliniaceae, Myodocarpaceae, Pennantiaceae, Pittosporaceae, Torricelliaceae. Order
- Campanus (mathematician)
mathematics: The universities: …which were made, that of Johannes Campanus (c. 1250; first printed in 1482) was easily the most popular, serving as a textbook for many generations. Such redactions of the Elements were made to help students not only to understand Euclid’s textbook but also to handle other, particularly philosophical, questions suggested…
- Campaspe River (river, Australia)
Campaspe River, river in central Victoria, Australia. It rises in the Eastern Highlands 50 miles (80 km) northwest of Melbourne and flows northward past Kyneton, beyond which it is dammed to form the Eppalock Reservoir. It continues past Elmore to enter the Murray River near Echuca after a course
- Campath (drug)
multiple sclerosis: Treatment of multiple sclerosis: Another monoclonal antibody, called Alemtuzumab (Lemtrada), which is used to treat chronic lymphocytic leukemia, also binds to the cell membrane of lymphocytes but works by stimulating antibody-mediated destruction of the cells. In clinical trials in patients with early-stage RRMS, this agent not only stopped progression of the disease but…
- Campau, Louis (French explorer)
Grand Rapids: …founded in 1826 by Frenchman Louis Campau as a trading post where several important Ottawa Indian trails (which are now diagonal streets) converged at the rapids on the Grand River. Ample waterpower generated by the 18-foot (5.5-metre) fall of the river and the availability of valuable lumber from nearby pine…
- Campbell family (Scottish noble family)
Campbell family, Scottish noble family. The Campbells of Lochow gained prominence in the later Middle Ages. In 1457 Colin Campbell, Baron Campbell (died 1493), was created 1st earl of Argyll. Archibald (died 1558), 4th earl, was a leading Protestant. Archibald (1532?–1573), 5th earl, was also a
- Campbell Hill (hill, Ohio, United States)
Campbell Hill, highest point (1,549 feet [472 metres]) in Ohio, U.S. It lies in Logan county, just east of Bellefontaine, in the west-central part of the state. Located in a scenic recreational area of springs and smoke-blue morainal hills rich in Indian lore, it was named for Charles O. Campbell,
- Campbell Island (island, New Zealand)
Campbell Island, outlying volcanic island of New Zealand, in the South Pacific Ocean, 400 miles (644 km) south of South Island. It has an area of 41 square miles (106 square km) and is high and rugged, rising to 1,867 feet (569 m) at Mount Honey, and gradually leveling off to the north. Cliffs
- Campbell Junior College (university, Buies Creek, North Carolina, United States)
Campbell University, private, coeducational institution of higher learning in Buies Creek, North Carolina, U.S., affiliated with the Baptist State Convention of North Carolina. The university comprises the College of Arts and Sciences, the Lundy Fetterman School of Business, the School of
- Campbell River (British Columbia, Canada)
Campbell River, district municipality, at the mouth of the Campbell River on the east coast of Vancouver Island, southwestern British Columbia, Canada. It is a centre for lumbering and paper mills and a popular vacation centre renowned for salmon fishing (based on its Tyee Club [Tyee is an Indian
- Campbell Soup Company (American company)
Campbell Soup Company, American manufacturer, incorporated in 1922 but dating to a canning firm first established in 1869, that is the world’s largest producer of soup. It is also a major producer of canned pasta products; snack foods, such as cookies and crackers; fruit and tomato juices; canned
- Campbell University (university, Buies Creek, North Carolina, United States)
Campbell University, private, coeducational institution of higher learning in Buies Creek, North Carolina, U.S., affiliated with the Baptist State Convention of North Carolina. The university comprises the College of Arts and Sciences, the Lundy Fetterman School of Business, the School of
- Campbell’s Soup Cans (paintings by Warhol)
Andy Warhol: …when he exhibited paintings of Campbell’s soup cans, Coca-Cola bottles, and wooden replicas of Brillo soap pad boxes. By 1963 he was mass-producing these purposely banal images of consumer goods by means of photographic silkscreen prints, and he then began printing endless variations of portraits of celebrities in garish colours.…
- Campbell, Ada (American comedian)
May Irwin was a Canadian-born American comedian and music-hall performer who popularized such songs as “After the Ball” and “A Hot Time in the Old Town.” Ada Campbell was introduced to the theatrical world in 1875, after her father’s death had left the family in poverty. Her mother got her and her
- Campbell, Alexander (American clergyman)
Alexander Campbell was an American clergyman, writer, and founder of the Disciples of Christ and Bethany College. He was the son of Thomas Campbell (1763–1854), a Presbyterian minister who immigrated in 1807 to the United States, where he promoted his program for Christian unity. In 1809 Alexander
- Campbell, Andrew (British engineer)
Nautilus: In 1886 Andrew Campbell and James Ash of England built a Nautilus submarine driven by electric motors powered by a storage battery; it augured the development of the submarine powered by internal-combustion engines on the surface and by electric-battery power when submerged.
- Campbell, Archibald (Scottish politician [1607–1661])
Archibald Campbell, 1st marquess and 8th earl of Argyll was the leader of Scotland’s anti-Royalist party during the English Civil Wars between King Charles I and Parliament. He guided his country to a brief period of independence from political and religious domination by England. He was the eldest
- Campbell, Archibald (British military officer)
Capture of Savannah: …arrived with 3,500 men under Lieutenant Colonel Archibald Campbell. These sailed up the Savannah River and landed Campbell with his men 3 miles (5 km) east of Savannah on 29 December. He then worked his way overland toward the town.
- Campbell, Archibald (Scottish revolutionary leader [1651-1703])
Archibald Campbell, 10th earl and 1st duke of Argyll was one of the Scottish leaders of the Glorious Revolution (1688–89). Campbell was the eldest son of the 9th earl, and he tried to get his father’s attainder reversed by seeking the favour of King James II. Being unsuccessful, however, he went
- Campbell, Archibald (Scottish Protestant leader [1629–1685])
Archibald Campbell, 9th Earl of Argyll was a Scottish Protestant leader who was executed for his opposition to the Roman Catholic James II of Great Britain and Ireland (James VII of Scotland). In his youth Campbell studied abroad but returned to Scotland in 1649. He fought at Dunbar (Sept. 3, 1650)
- Campbell, Archibald (British politician [1682-1761])
Archibald Campbell, 3rd duke of Argyll was the brother of the 2nd Duke of Argyll, and a prominent politician during the early Hanoverian period in Britain. Campbell served in the army for a short time under the Duke of Marlborough, but he was appointed treasurer of Scotland in 1705 and the
- Campbell, Archibald (Scottish Protestant leader [1532–1573])
Archibald Campbell, 5th earl of Argyll was a Scottish Protestant who supported Mary, Queen of Scots. Campbell succeeded his father, Archibald, the 4th earl, in 1558. He was an adherent of John Knox and assisted Lord James Stewart (afterward the regent Moray) in the warfare of the lords of the
- Campbell, Avril Phaedra (prime minister of Canada)
Kim Campbell is a Canadian politician, who in June 1993 became the first woman to serve as prime minister of Canada. Her tenure was brief, lasting only until November. Campbell was educated at the University of British Columbia (B.A., 1969) and at the London School of Economics, where she studied
- Campbell, Bebe Moore (American novelist and essayist)
Bebe Moore Campbell was an American novelist and essayist who examined race relations and mental illness in her work. In 1972 Campbell received a degree (B.S.) in elementary education from the University of Pittsburgh. She taught in Atlanta for five years and worked as a freelance journalist. Her
- Campbell, Beck David (American singer-songwriter)
Beck is an American singer-songwriter who brought Bob Dylan’s embodiment of the hipster folk minstrel into the age of hip-hop and sampling. Beck had art in his genes: his family included a mother (Bibbe Hansen) with ties to Andy Warhol’s Factory, a musician father (David Campbell) who would go on
- Campbell, Bill (American baseball player)
baseball: Rise of the players: Bill Campbell, a relief pitcher with the Minnesota Twins, was the first free agent to make a new connection. He signed a four-year, $1 million contract with the Boston Red Sox, which annually paid him more than 10 times his 1976 salary. The free agency…
- Campbell, Bruce (American actor)
Sam Raimi: Early life and The Evil Dead: …brother Ted and aspiring actor Bruce Campbell, both of whom became staples in Raimi productions.
- Campbell, Clementina Dinah (British singer)
Cleo Laine is a British singer and actress who mastered a variety of styles but is best known as the “Queen of Jazz.” Laine was born to a Jamaican father and an English mother. She quit school at age 14 and took a variety of jobs while auditioning for singing jobs. Her first break came in 1951,
- Campbell, Clive (American disc jockey)
DJ Kool Herc is a Jamaican American disc jockey (deejay or DJ) who is credited as the founder of hip-hop, a musical and cultural movement that revolves around four elements: rapping, graffiti painting, B-boying, and deejaying. In 1973, Herc introduced a number of innovations at a party he deejayed
- Campbell, Clyde Crane (American editor and author)
Horace L. Gold was a Canadian-born American science fiction editor and author who, as founder and editor of the magazine Galaxy Science Fiction, published many of the most prominent science fiction stories of the 1950s. Gold sold his first short story, “Inflexure,” to Astounding Stories in 1934
- Campbell, Colen (British architect)
Palladianism: …and the first volume of Colen Campbell’s Vitruvius Britannicus (1715), a folio of 100 engravings of contemporary “classical” buildings in Britain (two more volumes followed in 1717 and 1725), the designs of which had enormous influence in England. William Benson, a Whig member of Parliament, had already built the first…
- Campbell, Dan (American football player and coach)
Detroit Lions: The Dan Campbell era: …hired a new head coach, Dan Campbell. At his first press conference, he stressed intensity and toughness in what became known as his “kneecap” speech. He notably said:
- Campbell, David (Australian poet)
David Campbell was an Australian lyrical poet whose work displays his wartime experiences and sensitivity to nature while conveying a sense of angst and alienation. Campbell attended Jesus College, Cambridge, to complete a bachelor’s degree in 1937, during which time he was influenced by English
- Campbell, David Watt Ian (Australian poet)
David Campbell was an Australian lyrical poet whose work displays his wartime experiences and sensitivity to nature while conveying a sense of angst and alienation. Campbell attended Jesus College, Cambridge, to complete a bachelor’s degree in 1937, during which time he was influenced by English
- Campbell, Donald Malcolm (British race–car driver)
Donald Malcolm Campbell was a British motorboat and automobile driver who emulated his father, Sir Malcolm Campbell, in setting world’s speed records on land and on water. The first to complete an officially timed run in a jet-propelled hydroplane (July 23, 1955, Ullswater Lake, Cumberland),
- Campbell, Dorothy (British golfer)
golf: British tournaments and players: …first outstanding woman golfers was Dorothy Campbell, who won the Ladies’ British Amateur Championship in 1909 and 1911 and was runner-up in 1908. She won the U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship in 1909, 1910, and 1924 and the Canadian championship in 1910, 1911, and 1912. Among the many notable women who…
- Campbell, Douglas Houghton (American botanist)
Douglas Houghton Campbell was an American botanist known for his research concerning modes of sexual reproduction in mosses and ferns. His work intensified a controversy surrounding the evolutionary origin of the Tracheophyta (vascular plants). A professor of botany at Indiana University,
- Campbell, E. Simms (American cartoonist)
E. Simms Campbell was the first black American cartoonist to publish his work in general-circulation magazines on a regular basis. Campbell won a nationwide contest in cartooning while still attending high school. He later studied at the University of Chicago and the Art Institute of Chicago. He
- Campbell, Earl (American football player)
Earl Campbell is an American gridiron football running back whose bruising style made him one of the most dominant rushers in the history of the sport despite his relatively short career. Campbell was raised in poverty alongside 10 siblings in rural Texas. He was a hotly recruited high school
- Campbell, Elizabeth Bebe Moore (American novelist and essayist)
Bebe Moore Campbell was an American novelist and essayist who examined race relations and mental illness in her work. In 1972 Campbell received a degree (B.S.) in elementary education from the University of Pittsburgh. She taught in Atlanta for five years and worked as a freelance journalist. Her
- Campbell, Elmer Simms (American cartoonist)
E. Simms Campbell was the first black American cartoonist to publish his work in general-circulation magazines on a regular basis. Campbell won a nationwide contest in cartooning while still attending high school. He later studied at the University of Chicago and the Art Institute of Chicago. He
- Campbell, George (British author)
rhetoric: The Renaissance and after: …treatises of the period were George Campbell’s Philosophy of Rhetoric (1776) and Richard Whately’s Elements of Rhetoric (1828). All three books were written by Protestant clerics, and all reveal the pervasive assumptions of the Age of Reason. Though rhetoric may involve the whole man—indeed, that is the very reason Campbell…
- Campbell, George A. (American physicist)
telephone: Problems of interference and attenuation: … in New York City and George A. Campbell of AT&T both read Heaviside’s papers and realized that introducing inductive coils (loading coils) at regular intervals along the length of the telephone line could significantly reduce the attenuation of signals within the voice band (i.e., at frequencies less than 3.5 kilohertz).…
- Campbell, Glen (American musician, singer, and actor)
Glen Campbell was an American country-pop musician who rose to stardom in the late 1960s and ’70s and became a household name for his hit song “Rhinestone Cowboy,” which topped both the pop and country charts in 1975. By the time Campbell was age 14, he had become a good guitarist and was already a
- Campbell, Glen Travis (American musician, singer, and actor)
Glen Campbell was an American country-pop musician who rose to stardom in the late 1960s and ’70s and became a household name for his hit song “Rhinestone Cowboy,” which topped both the pop and country charts in 1975. By the time Campbell was age 14, he had become a good guitarist and was already a
- Campbell, Henry (prime minister of United Kingdom)
Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman was a British prime minister from December 5, 1905, to April 5, 1908. His popularity unified his own Liberal Party and the unusually strong cabinet that he headed. He took the lead in granting self-government to the Transvaal (1906) and the Orange River Colony (1907),
- Campbell, Ignatius Roy Dunnachie (South African poet)
Roy Campbell was a poet whose vigorous extrovert verse contrasted with the uneasy self-searching of the more prominent socially conscious English poets of the 1930s. Campbell led an adventurous life—much of it in France, Spain, and Portugal—and followed a variety of occupations, including
- Campbell, John (British official and soldier)
John Campbell, 2nd duke of Argyll was a Scottish supporter of the union with England and commander of the British forces in the Jacobite rebellion of 1715. The son of the 1st Duke of Argyll (in the Scottish peerage), he actively furthered the union of England and Scotland and was created a peer of
- Campbell, John Archibald (American jurist)
John Archibald Campbell was an American jurist and Supreme Court justice (1853–61). He also was assistant secretary of war for the Confederacy. At age 11 Campbell entered Franklin College (now the University of Georgia), and after graduating at age 14 he entered the U.S. Military Academy. Called
- Campbell, John D. (Canadian harness racer)
John D. Campbell is a Canadian harness racing driver who was North America’s leading money winner and a six-time champion at the Hambletonian (1987, 1988, 1990, 1995, 1998, and 2006), the top race for three-year-old trotters. Campbell absorbed the basics of horsemanship from his father and
- Campbell, John McLeod (Scottish theologian)
John McLeod Campbell was a Scots theologian, intellectual leader, and author. Campbell entered the University of Glasgow at the age of 11, remaining until he was 20. After studying divinity at Edinburgh he became a clergyman in 1821. He was appointed to the parish at Row in 1825 and while there
- Campbell, John W. (American author and editor)
John W. Campbell was an American science-fiction writer, considered the father of modern science fiction. Campbell, who spent his childhood reading widely and experimenting with science, began writing science fiction while in college. His first published story, “When the Atoms Failed” (1930),
- Campbell, John Wood, Jr. (American author and editor)
John W. Campbell was an American science-fiction writer, considered the father of modern science fiction. Campbell, who spent his childhood reading widely and experimenting with science, began writing science fiction while in college. His first published story, “When the Atoms Failed” (1930),
- Campbell, John, 1st earl of Breadalbane and Holland (Scottish politician)
John Campbell, 1st earl of Breadalbane and Holland was a Scottish politician, chiefly remembered for his alleged complicity in the Massacre of Glencoe. The son of Sir John Campbell of Glenorchy, 4th Baronet (d. 1686), he took part in the Royalist uprising under the Earl of Glencairn in 1654 and
- Campbell, Joseph (American businessman)
Campbell Soup Company: In 1869 Joseph Campbell (died 1900), a fruit merchant, and Abram Anderson, an icebox manufacturer, formed a partnership in Camden to can tomatoes, vegetables, preserves, and other products. In 1876 Anderson left the partnership, and Campbell joined with Arthur Dorrance to form a new firm, which in…
- Campbell, Joseph (American author)
Joseph Campbell was a prolific American author and editor whose works on comparative mythology examined the universal functions of myth in various human cultures and mythic figures in a wide range of literatures. Campbell attributed what he called his preoccupation with mythology to childhood trips
- Campbell, Kim (prime minister of Canada)
Kim Campbell is a Canadian politician, who in June 1993 became the first woman to serve as prime minister of Canada. Her tenure was brief, lasting only until November. Campbell was educated at the University of British Columbia (B.A., 1969) and at the London School of Economics, where she studied
- Campbell, Malcolm (British race–car driver)
Malcolm Campbell was a British automobile-racing driver who set world speed records on land and on water. A pilot in the Royal Flying Corps during World War I, Campbell became interested in automobile racing. From 1924, when he attained 146.16 miles (235.22 km) per hour, through 1935, he
- Campbell, Maria (Canadian author)
Canadian literature: Fiction: Autobiography and memoir—Maria Campbell’s Half-Breed (1973) and Lee Maracle’s Bobbi Lee, Indian Rebel (1975, rev. ed. 1990), for example—are key genres in First Nations witnessing and testimony. These genres are also a part of the life writing (which also includes biography, biofiction, letters, and diaries) that dominates…
- Campbell, Menzies (British politician)
Menzies Campbell is a Scottish politician who served as leader of the Liberal Democrats (2006–07). As a young man, Campbell was one of Britain’s top sprinters. He competed in the 1964 Olympic Games in Tokyo as well as the 1966 Commonwealth Games, and from 1967 until 1974 he held the national
- Campbell, Mike (American musician)
Tom Petty: …Petty and two former members, Mike Campbell and Benmont Tench, joined Ron Blair and Stan Lynch to form Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers.
- Campbell, Ming (British politician)
Menzies Campbell is a Scottish politician who served as leader of the Liberal Democrats (2006–07). As a young man, Campbell was one of Britain’s top sprinters. He competed in the 1964 Olympic Games in Tokyo as well as the 1966 Commonwealth Games, and from 1967 until 1974 he held the national
- Campbell, Mrs. Patrick (British actress)
Mrs. Patrick Campbell was an English actress known for her portrayals of passionate and intelligent characters. She debuted on the stage in 1888 (four years after she married Patrick Campbell), and her first notable role was as Paula Tanqueray in Sir Arthur Wing Pinero’s play The Second Mrs.
- Campbell, Naomi (British model)
Naomi Campbell is a British fashion model and actress best known as one of the elite “supermodels” who dominated the fashion industry in the 1980s and ’90s. She was the first Black model to appear on the cover of many luxury fashion magazines. She is also known for her high-profile legal
- Campbell, Naomi Elaine (British model)
Naomi Campbell is a British fashion model and actress best known as one of the elite “supermodels” who dominated the fashion industry in the 1980s and ’90s. She was the first Black model to appear on the cover of many luxury fashion magazines. She is also known for her high-profile legal
- Campbell, Neve (Canadian actress)
Wes Craven: Neve Campbell, and David Arquette. The film was followed by three sequels (1997, 2000, and 2011) that had varying degrees of success at the box office.
- Campbell, Norman Robert (British physicist and philosopher)
Norman Robert Campbell was a British physicist and philosopher of science who is best known for his contributions to the theory and practice of physical measurements. Campbell was educated at Eton College before being admitted in 1899 to Trinity College, Cambridge, from which he graduated and
- Campbell, Robert (Canadian trader and explorer)
Yukon River: History: The trader Robert Campbell, of the Hudson’s Bay Company, explored Pelly River, one of the Yukon headwaters, in 1840. In 1848 he established a trading post at Fort Selkirk, at the junction of the Pelly and Yukon rivers, in order to trade with the local Indians. In…
- Campbell, Roy (South African poet)
Roy Campbell was a poet whose vigorous extrovert verse contrasted with the uneasy self-searching of the more prominent socially conscious English poets of the 1930s. Campbell led an adventurous life—much of it in France, Spain, and Portugal—and followed a variety of occupations, including
- Campbell, Sir Colin (British commander)
Colin Campbell, Baron Clyde was a British soldier who was commander in chief of the British forces in India during the Indian Mutiny of 1857. The son of a carpenter named Macliver, he assumed his mother’s name of Campbell in 1807 when he was promised a military commission by Frederick Augustus, the
- Campbell, Sister Simone (American nun, attorney, and poet)
Sister Simone Campbell is an American Roman Catholic sister, attorney, and poet known as an outspoken advocate for social justice. Campbell took her religious vows (first vows 1967; final vows 1973) after joining the Sisters of Social Service (1964), an international Roman Catholic community rooted
- Campbell, Thomas (British poet)
Thomas Campbell was a Scottish poet, remembered chiefly for his sentimental and martial lyrics. He was also one of the initiators of a plan to found what became the University of London. Campbell went to Mull, an island of the Inner Hebrides, as a tutor in 1795 and two years later settled in
- Campbell, Thomas (American clergyman)
Disciples of Christ: Origins: …the upper Ohio Valley Presbyterian Thomas Campbell organized the Christian Association of Washington (Pennsylvania) in 1809 to plead for the “unity, peace, and purity” of the church. Soon its members formed the Brush Run Church and ordained his son Alexander, under whose leadership they accepted immersion of believers as the…
- Campbell, Walter Menzies, Baron Campbell of Pittenweem (British politician)
Menzies Campbell is a Scottish politician who served as leader of the Liberal Democrats (2006–07). As a young man, Campbell was one of Britain’s top sprinters. He competed in the 1964 Olympic Games in Tokyo as well as the 1966 Commonwealth Games, and from 1967 until 1974 he held the national
- Campbell, Wilfred (Canadian poet)
Wilfred Campbell was a Canadian poet, best remembered for Lake Lyrics and Other Poems (1889), a volume of poetry that celebrates the scenery of the Lake Huron–Georgian Bay country near his home. He is considered a member of the Confederation group. Campbell was educated at the University of
- Campbell, William (Irish-born American parasitologist)
William Campbell is an Irish-born American parasitologist known for his contribution to the discovery of the anthelmintic compounds avermectin and ivermectin, which proved vital to the control of certain parasitic infections in humans and other animals. For his discoveries, Campbell was awarded the
- Campbell, William Ellsworth (American magician)
Chung Ling Soo was an American conjurer who gained fame in England by impersonating a Chinese magician, both on and off the stage. (Read Harry Houdini’s 1926 Britannica essay on magic.) He began performing in the United States using the stage name William E. (“Billy”) Robinson. While in England in
- Campbell, William Wallace (American astronomer)
William Wallace Campbell was an astronomer known particularly for his spectrographic determinations of the radial velocities of stars—i.e., their motions toward the Earth or away from it. In addition, he discovered many spectroscopic binary stars, and in 1924 he published a catalog listing more
- Campbell, William Wilfred (Canadian poet)
Wilfred Campbell was a Canadian poet, best remembered for Lake Lyrics and Other Poems (1889), a volume of poetry that celebrates the scenery of the Lake Huron–Georgian Bay country near his home. He is considered a member of the Confederation group. Campbell was educated at the University of