- console (piano)
upright piano: …heights; the shortest are called spinets or consoles, and these are generally considered to have an inferior tone resulting from the shortness of their strings and their relatively small soundboards. The larger upright pianos were quite popular in the later 19th and early 20th centuries. The action (hammer and damper…
- console (architecture)
console, in architecture, type of bracket or corbel, particularly one with a scroll-shaped profile: usually an ogee (S or inverted S curve) or double-ogee terminating in volutes (spirals) above and below. A console projects about one-half its height or less to support a windowhead, cornice, shelf,
- console (furniture)
console, in furniture, a type of side table placed against a wall and normally fixed to it, requiring legs or other decorative support only at the front. Because it was viewed only from the front or sides, the back was left undecorated; the top was often of marble. In 17th-century Italy the console
- console (music)
keyboard instrument: Stop and key mechanisms: …that is controlled at the console.
- Consolida ambigua (plant)
larkspur: …genus Consolida) include the common rocket larkspur (Delphinium ajacis or C. ajacis) and its varieties, which grow up to 60 cm (2 feet) tall and have bright blue, pink, or white flowers on branching stalks. Perennial larkspurs—which tend toward blue flowers but vary to pink, white, red, and yellow—include a…
- consolidant (art)
art conservation and restoration: Stone sculpture: …by the introduction of a consolidant. The characteristics of good stone consolidants include long-term stability and strength under adverse conditions (outdoors), the ability to penetrate deeply into the stone and provide even distribution of the final consolidating product throughout the stone, and a minimal effect upon the appearance of the…
- Consolidated Annuities (economics)
consol, British government security without a maturity date. The name is a contraction for Consolidated Annuities, a form of British government stock that originated in 1751. The first issue of consols carried an interest rate of 3 percent (reduced to 2.75 percent in 1888 and to 2.5 percent in
- Consolidated Bank and Trust Company (bank, Richmond, Virginia, United States)
Maggie Lena Draper Walker: …African Americans and became the Consolidated Bank and Trust Company. Walker served thereafter as the bank’s chairman of the board. She also helped found the Richmond Council of Colored Women (1912). Serving as president, she helped raise large sums for the support of such institutions as Janie Porter Barrett’s Virginia…
- Consolidated Diamond Mines of South West Africa, Ltd. (Namibian company)
Sir Ernest Oppenheimer: Two years later he formed Consolidated Diamond Mines of South West Africa, Ltd. (reformed as the Namdeb Diamond Corp. in 1994). This diamond prospecting corporation was so successful that he gained control of the De Beers Consolidated Mines, which once dominated the world diamond market, and in 1930 established The…
- Consolidated Edison (American company)
George Metesky: …he was then terminated by Consolidated Edison. Although Metesky filed a worker’s compensation claim stating that the accident had led to pneumonia that progressed to tuberculosis, his claim was denied ostensibly because he had waited too long to file. His three appeals were likewise denied. Unemployed and living with his…
- Consolidated Rail Corporation (American company)
Consolidated Rail Corporation, publicly owned American railroad company established by the federal government under the Regional Rail Reorganization Act of 1973 to take over six bankrupt northeastern railroads. Conrail commenced operations on April 1, 1976, with major portions of the Central
- consolidated statement (accounting)
accounting: Consolidated statements: Most large corporations in the United States and in other industrialized countries own other companies. Their primary financial statements are consolidated statements, reflecting the total assets, liabilities, owners’ equity, net income, and cash flows of all the corporations in the group. Thus, for…
- Consolidated Vultee Aircraft Corporation (American corporation)
history of flight: Postwar airlines: …Corporation, more commonly known as Convair, built the speedy twin-engine 240/340/440 series, with trendy tricycle landing gear, which sold more than 1,000 models between 1947 and 1956, plus several hundred military versions that often trickled back into civil service. Convairs had a maximum cruising speed of 280 miles (450 km)…
- Consolidated-Vultee B-24 Liberator (aircraft)
B-24, long-range heavy bomber used during World War II by the U.S. and British air forces. It was designed by the Consolidated Aircraft Company (later Consolidated-Vultee) in response to a January 1939 U.S. Army Air Force (USAAF) requirement for a four-engined heavy bomber. The B-24 was powered by
- consolidation (business)
automotive industry: Consolidation: The trend toward consolidation in the industry has already been traced. In each of the major producing countries the output of motor vehicles is in the hands of a few very large firms, and small independent producers have virtually disappeared. The fundamental cause of…
- consolidation (materials processing)
advanced ceramics: Consolidation: Many of the same consolidation processes used for traditional ceramics—e.g., pressing, extrusion, slip casting—are also employed for advanced ceramics. A high degree of sophistication has been obtained in these processes. An outstanding example is the extruded honeycomb-shaped structure used as the catalyst…
- consolidation (soil mechanics)
mechanics of solids: Continuum plasticity theory: …also introduced the concept of consolidation, in which the compression of a fluid-saturated soil can take place only as the fluid slowly flows through the pore space under pressure gradients, according to Darcy’s law; this effect accounts for the time-dependent settlement of constructions over clay soils.
- Consolidation Coal Company (American company)
Conoco: In 1966 it acquired Consolidation Coal Company, the second largest coal company in the United States, and shortly thereafter began venturing into uranium and copper mining. Later diversifications included chemicals, plastics, and fertilizer businesses. In 1981 it was acquired by E.I. Du Pont de Nemours & Company and was…
- Consolo, Vincenzo (Italian author)
Italian literature: Fiction at the turn of the 21st century: …Mariner) consolidated the reputation of Vincenzo Consolo, who has been compared to authors as different as fellow Sicilian Leonardo Sciascia (for his rational lucidity) and Carlo Emilio Gadda (for his stylistic experiments).
- consommé (food)
soup: Consommé can be served cold, in which case it takes the form of a jelly as a result of the natural gelatin present in the bony meats from which it is prepared.
- consonance (prosody)
consonance, the recurrence or repetition of identical or similar consonants; specifically the correspondence of end or intermediate consonants unaccompanied by like correspondence of vowels at the end of two or more syllables, words, or other units of composition. As a poetic device, it is often
- consonance and dissonance (music)
consonance and dissonance, in music, the impression of stability and repose (consonance) in relation to the impression of tension or clash (dissonance) experienced by a listener when certain combinations of tones or notes are sounded together. In certain musical styles, movement to and from
- consonant (phonetics)
consonant, any speech sound, such as that represented by t, g, f, or z, that is characterized by an articulation with a closure or narrowing of the vocal tract such that a complete or partial blockage of the flow of air is produced. Consonants are usually classified according to place of
- consonant cluster (linguistics)
North American Indian languages: Phonology: …is their use of complex consonant clusters, as in Nuxalk (also called Bella Coola; Salishan family) tlk’wixw ‘don’t swallow it.’ Some words even lack vowels entirely—e.g., nmnmk’ ‘animal.’
- consonant gradation (phonetics)
Uralic languages: Consonant gradation: …known as consonant gradation (or lenition) is sometimes thought to be of Uralic origin. In Baltic-Finnic, excluding Veps and Livonian, earlier intervocalic single stops were typically replaced by voiced and fricative consonantal variants, and geminate (double) stops were shortened to single stops just in case the preceding vowel was stressed…
- consonantal writing system (linguistics)
writing: Types of writing systems: Consonantal writing systems, as the name implies, represent the consonantal value of a syllable while ignoring the vocalic element. Such a system, therefore, would represent the syllables pa, pe, pi, po, pu with a single character. Such scripts have graphs for consonant sounds but not…
- consort (music)
consort, in music, instrumental ensemble popular in England during the 16th and 17th centuries. The word consort was also used to indicate the music itself and the performance. Though the authenticity of such terms is doubtful, some researchers have suggested that there were “whole” consorts, in
- conspecific brood parasitism (animal behavior)
animal social behaviour: The ultimate causes of social behaviour: Conspecific brood parasitism, however, occurs in over 30 species of ducks and geese as well as in the northern bobwhite quail (Colinus virginianus), ring-necked pheasant (Phasianus colchicus), wood pigeon (Columba palumbus), European starling (Sturnus vulgaris), cuckoo (Cuculidae), and a variety of other
- conspicuous consumption (economics)
conspicuous consumption, term in economics that describes and explains the practice by consumers of using goods of a higher quality or in greater quantity than might be considered necessary in practical terms. The American economist and sociologist Thorstein Veblen coined the term in his book The
- conspiracy (law)
conspiracy, in common law, an agreement between two or more persons to commit an unlawful act or to accomplish a lawful end by unlawful means. Conspiracy is perhaps the most amorphous area in Anglo-American criminal law. Its terms are vaguer and more elastic than any conception of conspiracy to be
- Conspiracy of Charles, Duke of Byron (play by Chapman)
English literature: Other Jacobean dramatists: Chapman’s Bussy d’Ambois (1604) and Conspiracy of Charles, Duke of Byron (1608) drew on recent French history to chart the collision of the magnificent but redundant heroism of the old-style aristocrat, whose code of honour had outlived its social function, with pragmatic arbitrary monarchy; Chapman doubtless had the career and…
- Conspiracy of the Batavians (painting by Rembrandt)
Rembrandt: Fourth Amsterdam period (1658–69) of Rembrandt: …one of these works, the Conspiracy of the Batavians. It seems that the painting ultimately was not accepted.
- conspiracy theory
conspiracy theory, an attempt to explain harmful or tragic events as the result of the actions of a small powerful group. Such explanations reject the accepted narrative surrounding those events; indeed, the official version may be seen as further proof of the conspiracy. Conspiracy theories
- Conspiracy Theory (film by Donner [1997])
Richard Donner: The 1990s and beyond: Far better was Conspiracy Theory (1997), which featured Gibson as a New York cabbie who sees conspiracies at every turn. He enlists the help of an attorney (played by Julia Roberts) when it appears that his paranoia might be grounded in reality. Donner’s last film of the 1990s…
- Conspirator, The (film by Redford [2010])
Robert Redford: Redford subsequently directed The Conspirator (2010), about the trial of Mary Surratt, who was accused of having collaborated in the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, and The Company You Keep (2012), in which he starred as a family man running from his radical activist past. His directing style is…
- Constab Ballads (poetry by McKay)
Claude McKay: …verse, Songs of Jamaica and Constab Ballads (1912).
- constable (government official)
constable, officer of state in western European countries from medieval times and also of certain executive legal officials in Great Britain and the United States. The title comes stabuli is found in the Roman and particularly in the Eastern Roman, or Byzantine, Empire from the 5th century ad as
- Constable Hook (New Jersey, United States)
Bayonne, city, Hudson county, northeastern New Jersey, U.S., on a 3-mile (5-km) peninsula between Newark and Upper New York bays, adjacent to Jersey City, New Jersey, and within the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. Bayonne is connected with Staten Island, New York City (south), by a
- Constable, Archibald (Scottish publisher)
Archibald Constable was the most gifted bookseller-publisher of Edinburgh’s Augustan Age and, for a decade, owner of Encyclopædia Britannica. At the age of 14 Constable was apprenticed to an Edinburgh bookseller, Peter Hill; after six years he left to open his own bookstore. He began to publish
- Constable, John (British artist)
John Constable was a major figure in English landscape painting in the early 19th century. He is best known for his paintings of the English countryside, particularly those representing his native valley of the River Stour, an area that came to be known as “Constable country.” The son of a wealthy
- Constança (work by Castro)
Eugénio de Castro: …(1899; “Longings for Heaven”), and Constança (1900), a sensitive interpretation of the personal drama of the wife of Dom Pedro, who later became Peter I of Portugal. Dom Pedro’s mistress, Inês de Castro, figures prominently in Portuguese history and literature.
- Constance (queen of Sicily)
Constance was the queen of Sicily (1194–98) and Holy Roman empress-consort (1191–97). Her marriage to a Hohenstaufen gave that German dynasty a claim to the throne of Sicily and her political skill preserved the throne for her son. The daughter of King Roger II of Sicily, Constance married the
- Constance (Germany)
Konstanz, city, Baden-Württemberg Land (state), southwestern Germany. It is situated where the Rhine River flows out of Lake Constance (Bodensee), adjacent to Kreuzlingen, Switzerland, and within a small enclave of German territory on the south side of the lake. The site of a Roman fort, it was
- Constance, Council of (Roman Catholicism)
Council of Constance, (1414–18), 16th ecumenical council of the Roman Catholic Church. Following the election of two rival popes (Gregory XII in Rome and Benedict XIII in Avignon) in 1378 and the attempt at the Council of Pisa in 1409 to resolve the Great Schism by the election of a new pope, the
- Constance, Lake (lake, Europe)
Lake Constance, lake bordering Switzerland, Germany, and Austria and occupying an old glacier basin at an elevation of 1,299 feet (396 m). It has an area of 209 square miles (541 square km) and is about 40 miles (65 km) long and up to 8 miles (13 km) wide, with an average depth of 295 feet (90 m)
- Constance, Lake of (lake, Europe)
Lake Constance, lake bordering Switzerland, Germany, and Austria and occupying an old glacier basin at an elevation of 1,299 feet (396 m). It has an area of 209 square miles (541 square km) and is about 40 miles (65 km) long and up to 8 miles (13 km) wide, with an average depth of 295 feet (90 m)
- Constance, Peace of (Italy [1183])
Italy: Northern Italy: …truce of Venice into the Peace of Constance, in which he renounced the regalia claimed at Roncaglia but preserved the administrative rights of the crown. From defeat he thus managed to salvage a considerable portion of his imperial power.
- Constance, Treaty of (Europe [1153])
Frederick I: Early years: …Eugenius III to sign the Treaty of Constance (1153) with him because the Pope was more exposed to pressure from the Norman kingdom to the south as well as from Arnold of Brescia in Rome. Frederick promised not to make peace with the Roman commune, headed by Arnold (whom he…
- Constancia and Other Stories for Virgins (short stories by Fuentes)
Carlos Fuentes: …otras novelas para vírgenes (1989; Constancia and Other Stories for Virgins), El naranjo; o, los círculos del tiempo (1993; “The Orange Tree; or, The Circles of Time,” Eng. trans. The Orange Tree), Inquieta compañía (2004; “Disturbing Company”), and Todas las familias felices (2006; Happy Families: Stories).
- constancy phenomenon (psychology)
perceptual constancy, the tendency of animals and humans to see familiar objects as having standard shape, size, colour, or location regardless of changes in the angle of perspective, distance, or lighting. The impression tends to conform to the object as it is or is assumed to be, rather than to
- Constans I (Roman emperor)
Constans I was a Roman emperor from 337 to 350. The youngest son of Constantine the Great (reigned 306–337), Constans was proclaimed caesar by his father on December 25, 333. When Constantine died on September 9, 337, Constans and his two brothers, Constantius II and Constantine II, each adopted
- Constans II Pogonatus (Byzantine emperor)
Constans II Pogonatus was a Byzantine (Eastern Roman) emperor whose reign saw the loss of Byzantium’s southern and eastern provinces to the Arabs. The son of the emperor Constantine III, Constans came to the throne in September 641, at age 11, after his father’s death; during his minority the
- constant (mathematics and logic)
constant, a number, value, or object that has a fixed magnitude, physically or abstractly, as a part of a specific operation or discussion. In mathematics the term refers to a quantity (often represented by a symbol—e.g., π, the ratio of a circle’s circumference to its diameter) that does not
- constant acceleration (physics)
mechanics: Falling bodies and uniformly accelerated motion: … studied the mathematical properties of uniformly accelerated motion. He had little interest in whether that kind of motion could be observed in the realm of actual human existence, but he did discover that, if a particle is uniformly accelerated, its speed increases in direct proportion to time, and the distance…
- constant angular momentum, law of (physics)
principles of physical science: Conservation of angular momentum: The total angular momentum (also called moment of momentum) of an isolated system about a fixed point is conserved as well. The angular momentum of a particle of mass m moving with velocity v at the instant when it is at…
- constant boiling mixture (chemistry)
azeotrope, in chemistry, a mixture of liquids that has a constant boiling point because the vapour has the same composition as the liquid mixture. The boiling point of an azeotropic mixture may be higher or lower than that of any of its components. The components of the solution cannot be separated
- constant composition, law of (chemistry)
law of definite proportions, statement that every chemical compound contains fixed and constant proportions (by mass) of its constituent elements. Although many experimenters had long assumed the truth of the principle in general, the French chemist Joseph-Louis Proust first accumulated conclusive
- Constant Craving (song by lang and Mink)
k.d. lang: …to the hugely popular “Constant Craving.” The single introduced her to a wider audience, and it won the Grammy for best pop vocal performance.
- Constant de Rebecque, Henri-Benjamin (French author)
Benjamin Constant was a Franco-Swiss novelist and political writer, the author of Adolphe, a forerunner of the modern psychological novel. The son of a Swiss officer in the Dutch service, whose family was of French origin, he studied at Erlangen, Ger., briefly at the University of Oxford, and at
- constant displacement-rate testing machine
materials testing: Static tension and compression tests: Constant displacement-rate testing machines are generally driven by gear-screws.
- constant energy, law of (physics)
conservation of energy, principle of physics according to which the energy of interacting bodies or particles in a closed system remains constant. The first kind of energy to be recognized was kinetic energy, or energy of motion. In certain particle collisions, called elastic, the sum of the
- constant frequency (electronics)
bat: Orientation: …or the frequency may be constant (CF) during part of the pulse, followed by a brief FM sweep; either FM or CF pulses may have high harmonic content. The pulse duration varies with the species and the situation. During cruising flight the pulses of the greater false vampire bat (Megaderma…
- Constant Gardener, The (novel by le Carré)
John le Carré: In 2001 le Carré published The Constant Gardener (film 2005), in which a British diplomat investigates his wife’s death and uncovers a corrupt pharmaceutical company. In Absolute Friends (2003) two Cold War-era intelligence agents reconnect in Europe after the September 11 attacks. A Most Wanted Man (2008; film 2014) follows…
- Constant Gardener, The (film by Meirelles [2005])
John le Carré: …published The Constant Gardener (film 2005), in which a British diplomat investigates his wife’s death and uncovers a corrupt pharmaceutical company. In Absolute Friends (2003) two Cold War-era intelligence agents reconnect in Europe after the September 11 attacks. A Most Wanted Man (2008; film 2014) follows the efforts of…
- constant load-rate test machine
materials testing: Static tension and compression tests: Constant load-rate test machines employ separate load and measurement units; loads are generally applied by means of a hydraulic ram into which oil is pumped at a constant rate. Constant displacement-rate testing machines are generally driven by gear-screws.
- constant mass, law of (physics)
conservation of mass, principle that the mass of an object or collection of objects never changes, no matter how the constituent parts rearrange themselves. Mass has been viewed in physics in two compatible ways. On the one hand, it is seen as a measure of inertia, the opposition that free bodies
- constant momentum, law of (physics)
conservation of momentum, general law of physics according to which the quantity called momentum that characterizes motion never changes in an isolated collection of objects; that is, the total momentum of a system remains constant. Momentum is equal to the mass of an object multiplied by its
- Constant Nymph, The (film by Goulding [1943])
Edmund Goulding: The 1940s: …a Day (1943), Goulding made The Constant Nymph (1943), a solid soap opera in which Charles Boyer played a composer whose greatest work is inspired by the love of a smitten young girl (Joan Fontaine). Just as emotional, if less grand, was Claudia (1943), a marital comedy with Robert Young…
- Constant Prince, The (play by Calderón)
Pedro Calderón de la Barca: Religious plays of Pedro Calderón de la Barca: …is El príncipe constante (1629; The Constant Prince), which dramatizes the martyrdom of Prince Ferdinand of Portugal. El mágico prodigioso (1637; The Wonder-Working Magician) is a more complex religious play. Los dos amantes del cielo (The Two Lovers of Heaven) and El Joséf de las mujeres (c. 1640; “The Joseph…
- Constant Reader (book reviews by Parker)
Dorothy Parker: …book reviewer, known as “Constant Reader,” for The New Yorker, and she was associated with that magazine as a staff writer or contributor for much of the rest of her career.
- constant region (antibody structure)
immune system: Basic structure of the immunoglobulin molecule: …composed of two regions, called constant (C) and variable (V). These regions are distinguished on the basis of amino acid similarity—that is, constant regions have essentially the same amino acid sequence in all antibody molecules of the same class (IgG, IgM, IgA, IgD, or IgE), but the amino acid sequences…
- Constant’s Warehouse (Virginia, United States)
Suffolk, city, southeastern Virginia, U.S., at the head of navigation of the Nansemond River. It lies near the Great Dismal Swamp, immediately southwest of the cities of Portsmouth and Chesapeake in the Hampton Roads region. In 1974 it merged with the former Nansemond county and the towns of
- Constant, Benjamin (French author)
Benjamin Constant was a Franco-Swiss novelist and political writer, the author of Adolphe, a forerunner of the modern psychological novel. The son of a Swiss officer in the Dutch service, whose family was of French origin, he studied at Erlangen, Ger., briefly at the University of Oxford, and at
- constant-current coulometry (chemistry)
chemical analysis: Coulometry: …requirement can be met in constant-current coulometry by using the current to perform a coulometric titration. In a coulometric titration, the current generates a titrant that chemically reacts with the analyte. By keeping the precursor to the titrant in excess, it is possible to ensure that all of the current…
- constant-current electrogravimetry (chemistry)
chemical analysis: Electrogravimetry: Assays done by using constant-current electrogravimetry can be completed more rapidly (typically 30 minutes per assay) than assays done by using constant-potential electrogravimetry (typically one hour per assay), but the constant-current assays are subject to more interferences. If only one component in the solution can react to form a…
- constant-potential coulometry (chemistry)
chemical analysis: Coulometry: Constant-potential coulometry is not subject to the effects of interferences, because the potential of the working electrode is controlled at a value at which only a single electrochemical reaction can occur.
- constant-potential electrogravimetry (chemistry)
chemical analysis: Electrogravimetry: …than assays done by using constant-potential electrogravimetry (typically one hour per assay), but the constant-current assays are subject to more interferences. If only one component in the solution can react to form a deposit on the electrode, constant-current electrogravimetry is the preferred method. In constant-potential electrogravimetry the potential at the…
- constant-rate period (food technology)
fish processing: Drying: …of drying, known as the constant-rate period, water is evaporated from the surface of the product and the temperature of the product remains constant. In the final stages of drying, known as the falling-rate period, the temperature of the product increases, causing water to move from the interior to the…
- constant-sum game (game theory)
game theory: Classification of games: Constant-sum games are games of total conflict, which are also called games of pure competition. Poker, for example, is a constant-sum game because the combined wealth of the players remains constant, though its distribution shifts in the course of play.
- constant-utility index (economics)
consumer price index: Conceptual difficulties.: …of consumers is called a constant-utility index, since it measures not the change in price of a constant bundle of goods but the change over time in the costs of purchasing bundles of goods that yield a constant level of utility or satisfaction. Even this formulation is not completely rigorous…
- constant-voltage accelerator
particle accelerator: Constant-voltage accelerators: The simplest type of particle accelerator is constructed by mounting a particle source on one end of an insulated, evacuated tube and creating a high voltage between the ends, with the polarity such that the particles are impelled from the source toward the…
- Constanƫa (county, Romania)
Constanƫa, judeƫ (county), southeastern Romania, bounded by Bulgaria on the south. The Black Sea lies to the east, and the northward-draining Danube River delimits the county’s western border. Constanƫa judeƫ, consisting mostly of lowlands, contains several lakes. Constanƫa city, Romania’s
- Constanța (Romania)
Constanța, city, capital of Constanța județ (county), southeastern Romania, on the Black Sea. Situated about 125 miles (200 km) east of Bucharest, it is the country’s principal seaport. Since 1960 a coastal conurbation stretching from Năvodari to Mangalia, including the principal Black Sea resort,
- constantan (alloy)
cupronickel: Cupronickel has high electrical resistivity; constantan, an alloy of 55 percent copper and 45 percent nickel, is used in resistors, thermocouples, and rheostats. See also Monel.
- Constanten, Tom (American musician)
Grateful Dead: ), keyboard player Tom Constanten (b. March 19, 1944, Longbranch, New Jersey, U.S.), keyboard player Keith Godchaux (b. July 19, 1948, San Francisco—d. July 21, 1980, Marin county, California), vocalist Donna Godchaux (b. August 22, 1947, San Francisco), and keyboard player and vocalist Brent Mydland (b. October 21,…
- Constantia (American poet)
Sarah Wentworth Apthorp Morton was an American poet whose verse, distinctively American in character, was admired in her day. Sarah Apthorp was the daughter of a well-to-do merchant and evidently acquired an unusually thorough education. In 1781 she married Perez Morton. She had formed the habit of
- Constantia (ancient city, Cyprus)
Salamis, principal city of ancient Cyprus, located on the east coast of the island, north of modern Famagusta. According to the Homeric epics, Salamis was founded after the Trojan War by the archer Teucer, who came from the island of Salamis, off Attica. This literary tradition probably reflects
- Constantia (France)
Coutances, town, Manche département, in the Normandy région of northwestern France, on the Soulle River, near the English Channel. As Cosedia, it was one of the nation’s chief pre-Roman towns, inhabited by the Unelli, an ancient Celtic tribe. Renamed Constantia in the 3rd century to honour the
- Constantia (South Africa)
Constantia, residential area, Western Cape province, South Africa, near Cape Town. It is located in Constantia Valley, famous since the 18th century for wines produced on both government and private farms. The Groot Constantia homestead there was built about 1685 by Governor Simon van der Stel and
- Constantia (American writer)
Judith Sargent Stevens Murray was an American writer during the early republic, remembered largely for her essays and journalistic comment on contemporary public issues, especially women’s rights. Judith Sargent was the daughter of a wealthy shipowner and merchant and received an unusually good
- Constantijn Huygens and His Secretary (painting by Keyser)
Thomas de Keyser: …even when full-length, as in Constantijn Huygens and His Secretary (1627). He painted few pictures during the last 27 years of his life. De Keyser’s major architectural work is the tower of the Amsterdam Town Hall.
- Constantin (French noble)
Bertran De Born: …twice warred with his brother Constantin for sole possession of the family heritage. Their liege lord, Richard the Lion-Heart, Duke of Aquitaine, initially favoured Constantin, successfully besieging Bertran’s fortress of Hautefort and expelling him (1183). Later, however, lord and vassal were reconciled; and Bertran, restored to his lands, abetted Richard…
- Constantine (Roman emperor)
Constantine was a usurping Roman emperor who was recognized as coruler by the Western emperor Honorius in 409. Proclaimed emperor by his army in Britain in 407, Constantine crossed to the European continent with a force of British troops; by the end of the year he controlled eastern Gaul. An army
- Constantine (Algeria)
Skikda, town, Mediterranean Sea port, northeastern Algeria, situated on the Gulf of Stora. Founded by French Marshal Sylvain-Charles Valée in 1838 as the port of Constantine, it has an artificial harbour. Skikda occupies the site of ancient Rusicade, port of 4th-century Cirta, and has the largest
- Constantine (pope)
Constantine was the pope from 708 to 715. Constantine upheld Roman supremacy against the insubordination of Felix, archbishop of Ravenna. He received as a pilgrim King Cenred of Mercia, who became a monk at Rome (709). Constantine strongly objected to the canons, several of which opposed Roman
- Constantine (Algeria)
Constantine, city, northeast Algeria. A natural fortress, the city occupies a rocky diamond-shaped plateau that is surrounded, except at the southwest, by a precipitous gorge through the eastern side of which flows the Rhumel River. The plateau is 2,130 feet (650 metres) above sea level and from
- Constantine (Holy Roman emperor)
Frederick II was the king of Sicily (1197–1250), duke of Swabia (as Frederick VI, 1228–35), German king (1212–50), and Holy Roman emperor (1220–50). A Hohenstaufen and grandson of Frederick I Barbarossa, he pursued his dynasty’s imperial policies against the papacy and the Italian city-states. He
- Constantine (Christian theologian)
Saints Cyril and Methodius: Cyril (originally named Constantine) had missionary experience with the Arabs and had been a professor of philosophy at the patriarchal school in Constantinople when he began to work with his brother Methodius, the abbot of a Greek monastery, for the conversion of the Khazars northeast…
- Constantine (Carthaginian monk)
Isaac ben Solomon Israeli: …in 1087 by the monk Constantine, who claimed to have written them himself. Not until 1515 was their true authorship uncovered, and the works were republished in Lyon under the title Omnia Isaac Opera (“All of Isaac’s Works”); the editor, however, mistakenly included the writings of other medical scholars as…
- Constantine (antipope)
Constantine (II) was an antipope from 767 to 768. He was a soldier and—through the support of his brother Toto, duke of the bishopric of Nepi near Rome—was elected pope on July 5, 767, to succeed St. Paul I. Constantine’s opponents, led by Christopher, the powerful chief of the notaries, fled to