- Crab pulsar (astronomy)
Crab Nebula: In the late 1960s the Crab pulsar (NP 0532), thought to be the collapsed remnant of the supernova, was discovered near the centre of the nebula. The pulsar, which flashes in radio, visible, X-ray, and gamma-ray wavelengths at 30 times per second, provides the energy that allows the nebula to…
- crab spider (arachnid)
crab spider, (family Thomisidae), family of spiders (order Araneida) that are crablike in shape and, like many crabs, often walk sideways or backward. The family, which is worldwide in distribution, contains many common species that live on the soil surface, in leaf litter, or under bark. About 125
- crab-eating dog (mammal)
crab-eating fox, (Cerdocyon thous), South American member of the dog family (Canidae), found in grassy or forested areas. It attains a length of 60–70 cm (24–28 inches), excluding a 30-cm tail, and has a gray to brown coat that is frequently tinged with yellow. It generally lives alone or in pairs
- crab-eating fox (mammal)
crab-eating fox, (Cerdocyon thous), South American member of the dog family (Canidae), found in grassy or forested areas. It attains a length of 60–70 cm (24–28 inches), excluding a 30-cm tail, and has a gray to brown coat that is frequently tinged with yellow. It generally lives alone or in pairs
- crab-eating macaque (primate)
cloning: Early cloning experiments: …of two clones of the crab-eating macaque (Macaca fascicularis), the first primate clones using the SCNT process. (SCNT has been carried out with very limited success in humans, in part because of problems with human egg cells resulting from the mother’s age and environmental factors.)
- crab-eating raccoon (mammal)
raccoon: The crab-eating raccoon (P. cancrivorus) inhabits South America as far south as northern Argentina. It resembles the North American raccoon but has shorter, coarser fur. The other members of genus Procyon are not well known. Most are tropical and probably rare. They are the Barbados raccoon…
- crabapple (tree)
crabapple, any of several small trees of the genus Malus, in the rose family (Rosaceae). Crabapples are native to North America and Asia. They are widely grown for their attractive growth habit, spring flower display, and decorative fruits. The fruits are much smaller and more tart than the common
- Crabbe, Buster (American athlete and actor)
Buster Crabbe was an American swimmer whose Olympic gold medal led to a long acting career. Crabbe, who grew up in Hawaii and swam for the University of Southern California, competed at the 1928 Olympics in Amsterdam, winning a bronze medal in the 1,500-metre freestyle and finishing in fourth place
- Crabbe, Clarence Lindon (American athlete and actor)
Buster Crabbe was an American swimmer whose Olympic gold medal led to a long acting career. Crabbe, who grew up in Hawaii and swam for the University of Southern California, competed at the 1928 Olympics in Amsterdam, winning a bronze medal in the 1,500-metre freestyle and finishing in fourth place
- Crabbe, George (English poet)
George Crabbe was an English writer of poems and verse tales memorable for their realistic details of everyday life. Crabbe grew up in the then-impoverished seacoast village of Aldeburgh, where his father was collector of salt duties, and he was apprenticed to a surgeon at 14. Hating his mean
- crabbing (finishing)
textile: Tentering, crabbing, and heat-setting: …wet wools it is called crabbing; when applied to synthetic fibres it is sometimes called heat-setting, a term also applied to the permanent setting of pleats, creases, and special surface effects.
- crabeater (fish)
cobia, (species Rachycentron canadum), swift-moving, slim marine game fish, the only member of the family Rachycentridae (order Perciformes). The cobia is found in most warm oceans. A voracious, predatory fish, it may be 1.8 m (6 feet) long and weigh 70 kg (150 pounds) or more. It has a jutting
- crabeater seal (mammal)
crabeater seal, (species Lobodon carcinophagus), southern seal of the family Phocidae found among drifting ice packs around the Antarctic continent. A slender animal measuring about 2–2.5 m (6.6–8.2 feet) long and up to about 225 kg (500 pounds) in weight, the crabeater seal feeds on krill
- crabgrass (plant)
crabgrass, (genus Digitaria), genus of about 220 species of grasses in the family Poaceae. Several species, notably hairy crabgrass (Digitaria sanguinalis) and smooth crabgrass (D. ischaemum), are very troublesome weeds in lawns, fields, and waste spaces because they have decumbent stems that root
- Crabtree, Charlotte (American actress)
Lotta Crabtree was an American actress whose early days as an entertainer during the California Gold Rush led to her immense popularity as the darling of the American stage and in England. Crabtree grew up from the age of four in California, where her father moved the family during the Gold Rush of
- Crabtree, Lotta (American actress)
Lotta Crabtree was an American actress whose early days as an entertainer during the California Gold Rush led to her immense popularity as the darling of the American stage and in England. Crabtree grew up from the age of four in California, where her father moved the family during the Gold Rush of
- Crabwalk (novella by Grass)
Wilhelm Gustloff: …the novella Im Krebsgang (2002; Crabwalk) by Günter Grass.
- Cracidae (bird family)
galliform: Annotated classification: Family Cracidae (chachalacas, guans, and curassows) Tail moderately long and broad. Plumage black or brown, duller in female. Most species with bare skin between eyes and beak (lores), some with fleshy wattles or other ornaments on face or crown. Medium to large; length 52–99 cm (20–39…
- crack (drug)
crack epidemic: …increase in the use of crack cocaine, or crack, in the United States during the early 1980s. Crack cocaine was popularized because of its affordability, its immediate euphoric effect, and its high profitability. The crack epidemic had particularly devastating effects within the African American communities of the inner cities by…
- crack epidemic (United States history [1980s])
crack epidemic, the significant increase in the use of crack cocaine, or crack, in the United States during the early 1980s. Crack cocaine was popularized because of its affordability, its immediate euphoric effect, and its high profitability. The crack epidemic had particularly devastating effects
- crack willow (plant)
willow: nigra), crack, or brittle (S. fragilis), and white (S. alba), all reaching 20 metres (65 feet) or more; the first named is North American, the other two Eurasian but naturalized widely. All are common in lowland situations.
- Crack-Up, The (work by Fitzgerald)
The Crack-Up, essay by F. Scott Fitzgerald, published serially in Esquire magazine in 1936 and posthumously, in book form, in The Crack-Up: With Other Uncollected Pieces, Note-Books, and Unpublished Letters (1945). This confessional essay documents Fitzgerald’s spiritual and physical deterioration
- cracker (food)
baking: Sheeting and cutting: Many cookies and crackers are made in this way, and designs may be impressed in the dough pieces by docking pins (used primarily to puncture the sheet, preventing formation of excessively large gas bubbles) or by cutting edges partially penetrating the dough pieces.
- Crackers (film by Malle [1984])
Sean Penn: … (1983), a punk rocker-burglar in Crackers (1984), a World War II marine about to ship out in the romance Racing with the Moon (1984), and a spy selling U.S. government secrets to the KGB in The Falcon and the Snowman (1985)—garnering favourable notices from critics even when the vehicle he…
- cracking (materials failure)
mechanics of solids: Stress concentrations and fracture: …as the basis for predicting crack growth response under service loadings in terms of laboratory data that is correlated in terms of that factor. That stress intensity factor is the coefficient of a characteristic singularity in the linear elastic solution for the stress field near a crack tip; it is…
- cracking (chemical process)
cracking, in petroleum refining, the process by which heavy hydrocarbon molecules are broken up into lighter molecules by means of heat and usually pressure and sometimes catalysts. Cracking is the most important process for the commercial production of gasoline and diesel fuel. Cracking of
- cracking (political strategy)
Gill v. Whitford: …to have Republican majorities (“cracking”). By thus reducing the total number of districts that were likely to elect Democrats, the drafters hoped to limit Democratic representation in the state legislature and to maintain Republican control of the body even following elections in which Democrats won a majority of the…
- crackle (medicine)
cardiovascular disease: Myocardial infarction: …by subtle evidence such as rales (abnormal respiratory sounds) in the lungs or a gallop rhythm of the heartbeat may the evidence of some minor degree of heart failure be detected. In a small percentage of cases, the state of shock occurs, with pallor, coolness of the hands and feet,…
- Cracklin’ Rosie (song by Diamond)
Neil Diamond: …(1969), “Sweet Caroline” (1969), “Cracklin’ Rosie” (1970), “I Am…I Said” (1971), and “Song Sung Blue” (1972).
- crackling (animal product)
lard: …vessels; the residue is called cracklings. Neutral lard is prepared by melting leaf fat (from around the kidneys) and back fat. Continuous rendering involves grinding, rapid heating, and separation of fat from the cells by centrifuging. Lard composition varies with the diet of the hogs. The predominant fatty acids are…
- crackowe (shoe)
crakow, long, pointed, spiked shoe worn by both men and women first in the mid-14th century and then condemned by law. Crakows were named after the city of Kraków (Cracow), Pol., and they were also known as poulaines (Polish). Crakows were admired on the feet of the courtiers of Anne of Bohemia,
- Craco (ghost town, Italy)
ghost town: Craco, Italy, was abandoned by many of its residents during the 1960s following a series of damaging landslides. The rest left after the devastating Irpinia earthquake of 1980. Craco is now a popular tourist attraction where parts of several movies have been filmed, including the…
- Cracow (Poland)
Kraków, city and capital of Małopolskie województwo (province), southern Poland, lying on both sides of the upper Vistula River. One of the largest cities in Poland, it is known primarily for its grand historic architecture and cultural leadership; UNESCO designated its old town area a World
- Cracow, Republic of (historical state, Poland)
Republic of Cracow, tiny state that for the 31 years of its existence (1815–46) was the only remaining independent portion of Poland. Established by the Congress of Vienna at the conclusion of the Napoleonic Wars (1815), the free Republic of Cracow consisted of the ancient city of Cracow (Kraków)
- Cracow, university at (university, Kraków, Poland)
Casimir III: Domestic achievements: …the Academy of Kraków (now Jagiellonian University) in 1364.
- Cracticidae (bird family)
Cracticidae, songbird family, of the order Passeriformes, that includes species of the bell-magpie, butcherbird, and currawong (qq.v.) groups of Australia. They are sometimes collectively called songshrikes, from their vocal powers and their shrikelike
- Cracticus torquatus (bird)
butcherbird: A familiar species is the gray butcherbird (C. torquatus).
- Craddock, Charles Egbert (American writer)
Mary Noailles Murfree was an American writer in the local-colour movement, most of whose stories present the narrow, stern life of the Tennessee mountaineers who were left behind in the advance of civilization. Mary Murfree studied at Chegaray Institute, a French school in Philadelphia, in 1867–69.
- Craddock, Charles Egbert (American writer)
Mary Noailles Murfree was an American writer in the local-colour movement, most of whose stories present the narrow, stern life of the Tennessee mountaineers who were left behind in the advance of civilization. Mary Murfree studied at Chegaray Institute, a French school in Philadelphia, in 1867–69.
- Craddock, Vincent Eugene (American singer)
Gene Vincent American rockabilly singer whose swaggering, black-leather-clad image defined the look of the rock rebel. Discharged from the U.S. Navy in 1955 following a motorcycle accident in which his leg was seriously injured, Vincent tried his hand at country music. In 1956, with record
- cradle (printmaking tool)
mezzotint: …later an instrument called a cradle, or rocker, was used. It resembles a small spade with a toothed edge, and its cutting action throws up rough ridges of metal called burrs. The burrs are scraped away in places intended to be white in the finished print. In the 21st century,…
- cradle (furniture)
cradle, in furniture, infant’s bed of wood, wicker, or iron, having enclosed sides and suspended from a bar, slung upon pivots, or mounted on rockers. The rocking motion of the cradle is intended to lull the infant to sleep. The cradle is an ancient type of furniture, and its origins are unknown.
- cradle (mining tool)
placer mining: …pan was the rocker, or cradle, named for its resemblance to a child’s cradle. As it was rocked, it sifted large quantities of ore. Gravel was shoveled onto a perforated iron plate, and water was poured over it, causing finer material to drop through the perforations and onto an apron…
- cradle (harvesting tool)
cradle, in agriculture, rakelike harvesting implement of wood, devised in ancient times for gathering the stalks of wheat, oats, barley, and other grains (first cut with the sickle) and laying them in rows for binding. The later cradle scythe invented in Europe consisted of a framework of long,
- Cradle Mountain (mountain, Tasmania, Australia)
Cradle Mountain, mountain situated at the northern boundary of the 622-square-mile (1,611-square-kilometre) Cradle Mountain–Lake St. Clair National Park, in northwest-central Tasmania, Australia. Located on Tasmania’s central plateau, its lava basalt peak rises to 5,069 feet (1,545 m). It is an
- Cradle of Life (work by Adamic)
Louis Adamic: …successful sequels, Grandsons (1935) and Cradle of Life (1936), were followed by his first novel, The House in Antigua (1937). His following book, My America (1938), a mixture of memoir and social philosophy, outlines his dream of a unified American people.
- Cradle of Mankind (archaeological site, Tanzania)
Olduvai Gorge, paleoanthropological site in the eastern Serengeti Plain, within the boundaries of the Ngorongoro Conservation Area in northern Tanzania. It is a steep-sided ravine consisting of two branches that have a combined length of about 30 miles (48 km) and are 295 feet (90 metres) deep.
- cradle vault (architecture)
barrel vault, ceiling or roof consisting of a series of semicylindrical arches. See
- Cradle Will Rock (film by Robbins [1999])
Tim Robbins: …(as well as acted in) Cradle Will Rock (1999), about the pro-union play The Cradle Will Rock, written in 1937 by Marc Blitzstein for the WPA Federal Theatre Project; the movie was nominated for the Palm d’Or at Cannes. Also in 1999 he played The President in the Mike Myers…
- Cradle Will Rock, The (work by Blitzstein)
Marc Blitzstein: His first opera, The Cradle Will Rock (1937), is the story of a capitalist’s resistance to unionization. Controversy surrounded much of Blitzstein’s work, which is experimental in subject matter and characterized by unexpected tonalities. Blitzstein believed fascism should be fought with art, and he had a gift for…
- Cradle, The (painting by Morisot)
Western painting: Impressionism: …Races (1870–73) and Berthe Morisot’s The Cradle (1873). Manet himself was absent, hoping for academic success; his Gare Saint-Lazare (1873), influenced by the Impressionist palette, was accepted at the Salon. Modeling himself on Pissarro, Cézanne sublimated the turbulent emotions of his earlier work in pictures that were studied directly and…
- cradle-to-grave responsibility (waste management)
extended producer responsibility: Benefits of extended producer responsibility: …a life-cycle or a “cradle-to-grave” perspective. Extended producer responsibility policies attempt to change how a product is produced—the “cradle”—to affect how a product may be disposed of—the “grave.”
- cradleboard
Southwest Indian: Socialization and education: Cradles and cradleboards were used, especially during the first year of life; the Hopi viewed swaddling as the first of many periods of conditioning that helped the individual to gain self-control. From birth, children were treated as an integral part of the family; among the Navajo, for…
- Cradleboard Teaching Project (educational initiative)
Buffy Sainte-Marie: Activism: …the mid-1990s she established the Cradleboard Teaching Project, which facilitated educational partnerships—typically over long distances—between Native and non-Native American communities and promoted development of culturally sensitive school curricula. Meanwhile, in the 1980s she began to create, exhibit, and teach computer-based visual art at various venues across North America.
- cradling (lacrosse)
lacrosse: The game: …of the game is “cradling,” in which the player rapidly rotates the stick in half-turns while holding it nearly upright as he runs. The centrifugal force developed keeps the ball in the pocket of the crosse and also puts it in position for accurate throwing. Defensive players are allowed…
- Cradock, Sir Christopher (British officer)
World War I: The war at sea, 1914–15: …on a British force, under Sir Christopher Cradock, which had sailed from the Atlantic to hunt it down: without losing a single ship, it sank Cradock’s two major cruisers, Cradock himself being killed. But the fortunes of the war on the high seas were reversed when, on December 8, the…
- craft (art)
work: …the products of artisans and craftsmen; peasants worked family farms; and slaves worked in mines and craft workshops. These workshops were prototypes of the modern factory, producing metal weapons and tools with fewer than a dozen workers under the direction of a master craftsman. Larger projects, such as pyramids and…
- craft beer (beverage)
craft beer, carbonated fermented malted alcoholic beverage created by small, independent breweries that produce a limited annual volume. Production runs are often modest, usually fewer than 1,000 barrels each year per brewery. With this narrow focus comes the freedom to experiment with styles and
- craft brewery
beer: Maturation and packaging: microbrewed ales are packaged in bottles together with yeast to make “bottle-conditioned” beer.
- craft guild (organization)
organized labour: Origins in Britain: Medieval guilds, which regulated craft production, clearly differed in function from trade unions, in that guilds were combinations of both masters and workers while modern unions emerged to serve workers’ interests alone. However, aspects of guild regulation—as in matters relating to apprenticeship—were incorporated into the objectives of early unionism,…
- craft lace
craft lace, group of laces made by knitting, crochet, tatting, and macramé, as well as tape laces using straight machine tapes for the outer borders of the design motifs. Though some varieties were made professionally for commercial purposes, most craft laces were popular as domestic pastimes from
- craft union (labor)
craft union, trade union combining workers who are engaged in a particular craft or skill but who may work for various employers and at various locations. Formed to improve wage levels and working conditions, craft unions were established in Britain and in the United States during the middle of the
- Craft, Robert (American musician)
Igor Stravinsky: Life and career: ) According to Craft, who entered Stravinsky’s household in 1948 and remained his intimate associate until the composer’s death, the realization that he was regarded as a spent force threw Stravinsky into a major creative depression, from which he emerged, with Craft’s help, into a phase of serial…
- craft, water (transport)
ship: History of ships: Boats are still vital aids to movement, even those little changed in form during that 6,000-year history. The very fact that boats may be quite easily identified in illustrations of great antiquity shows how slow and continuous had been this evolution until just 150 years…
- Crafts, Hannah (American bondswoman and author)
African American literature: Prose, drama, and poetry: …real-world experiences of its author, Hannah Bond (who published under the pseudonym Hannah Crafts)—was discovered in manuscript in the early 21st century and is among the earliest contributions to African American women’s fiction. Harper was renowned in mid-19th-century Black America as the poetic voice of her people, a writer whose…
- Craftsman Truck Series (auto racing championship)
NASCAR: …in 1995 and called the Craftsman Truck Series 1996–2008), in which race cars with bodies that mimic pickup trucks are used. NASCAR also sanctions a number of regional series in the United States. NASCAR’s headquarters are in Daytona Beach.
- Craftsman’s Handbook, The (work by Cennini)
Cennino Cennini: …writing Il libro dell’arte (1437; The Craftsman’s Handbook), the most informative source on the methods, techniques, and attitudes of medieval artists. Painting, according to Cennini, holds a high place among human occupations because it combines theory or imagination with the skill of the hand. In Il libro dell’arte, Cennini gave…
- Craftsman, The (American magazine)
Harvey Ellis: …designs published in 1903 in The Craftsman, Stickley’s monthly magazine.
- Craftsman, The (British journal)
Nicholas Amhurst: …the Whigs, and editor of The Craftsman, a political journal of unprecedented popularity that was hostile to the Whig government of Sir Robert Walpole.
- craftsmanship (art)
sculpture: The sculptor as designer and as craftsman: …is the task of a craftsman. A sculptor often functions as both designer and craftsman, but these two aspects of sculpture may be separated.
- Crafty Admiral (American racehorse)
Affirmed: Breeding and early years: …Tell You, a daughter of Crafty Admiral. Both grandsires were champions. On the maternal side of Affirmed’s lineage, Crafty Admiral earned $499,200 in four years of racing. On the paternal side, Affirmed’s grandsire, Raise a Native, was undefeated in four races before becoming injured and having to retire.
- crag and tail (geology)
roche moutonnée: A crag and tail is distinguished from a roche moutonnée by the presence of an elongate, tapered ridge of till extending downstream. Often produced by selective erosion of softer strata, roche moutonnée landscapes are characteristic of glaciated crystalline shield areas.
- Craggs, James (British politician)
James Craggs was an English politician implicated in the South Sea Bubble (1720), a widespread speculation in shares of the South Sea Company, which had taken over most of the British national debt. The company persuaded investors to exchange their state annuities for the greatly overvalued stock,
- Crago septemspinosus (crustacean)
shrimp: The common European shrimp, or sand shrimp, Crangon vulgaris (Crago septemspinosus), occurs in coastal waters on both sides of the North Atlantic and grows to about 8 cm (3 inches); it is gray or dark brown with brown or reddish spots. The shrimp Peneus setiferus feeds on small plants and…
- Craig’s list (corporation)
Craigslist, private corporation operating over the Internet to provide classified advertisements, community information services, and community forums. Most of these listings are restricted to specific locations, which include some 500 cities in 50 countries. Craig’s list was launched in 1995 by
- Craig’s Wife (play by Kelly)
George Kelly: In Craig’s Wife (1925), Kelly shifted his vision to the upper middle class and abandoned comedy to write a savage drama of a woman who sacrifices her husband to her possessions, ultimately losing both. Kelly wrote several other plays, but none was a popular success. He…
- Craig’s Wife (film by Arzner [1936])
Dorothy Arzner: Films of the 1930s and ’40s: In Craig’s Wife (1936), an adaptation of a popular play by George Kelly, Arzner tried to create some sympathy for the cold, domineering title character (played by Rosalind Russell), who is less interested in her husband (John Boles) than in maintaining the gleam of her showcase…
- Craig, Daniel (English actor)
Daniel Craig is an English actor known for his restrained gravitas and ruggedly handsome features. Craig achieved international fame with his portrayal of playboy spy James Bond in several films, beginning with Casino Royale (2006). Craig’s father was a steelworker and later a pub owner, and his
- Craig, Daniel Wroughton (English actor)
Daniel Craig is an English actor known for his restrained gravitas and ruggedly handsome features. Craig achieved international fame with his portrayal of playboy spy James Bond in several films, beginning with Casino Royale (2006). Craig’s father was a steelworker and later a pub owner, and his
- Craig, Edith Ailsa (British theater director and costumier)
Edward Godwin: …both of whom Terry reared: Edith Ailsa Craig (1869–1947), who was an active theatre director and costumier, as well as a suffragist, and Edward Gordon Craig, a noted stage designer.
- Craig, Edward Gordon (British actor and director)
Edward Gordon Craig was an English actor, theatre director-designer, producer, and theorist who influenced the development of the theatre in the 20th century. Craig was the second child of a liaison between the actress Ellen Terry and the architect Edward William Godwin. Like Edith (the other child
- Craig, Edward Henry Gordon (British actor and director)
Edward Gordon Craig was an English actor, theatre director-designer, producer, and theorist who influenced the development of the theatre in the 20th century. Craig was the second child of a liaison between the actress Ellen Terry and the architect Edward William Godwin. Like Edith (the other child
- Craig, James (prime minister of Northern Ireland)
James Craig, 1st Viscount Craigavon was a soldier and statesman, a leading advocate of maintaining the union between Ireland and Great Britain, and the first prime minister of Northern Ireland (from June 22, 1921, until his death). Craig became a stockbroker, served with an Irish unit in the South
- Craig, James (British architect)
Edinburgh: The New Town: ” The architect, James Craig, set out a vision of order and space: a grid five streets deep and seven streets wide with a broad central axis terminating in grand squares at each end. St. George’s Church would anchor the western end of the scheme, St. Andrew’s the…
- Craig, James Downey (American hockey player)
Jim Craig is an American ice hockey goaltender who was part of the U.S. hockey team that won the gold medal at the 1980 Winter Olympics at Lake Placid, New York, U.S. The American victory in the hockey tournament, known as the “miracle on ice,” was one of the greatest surprises in the history of
- Craig, Jim (American hockey player)
Jim Craig is an American ice hockey goaltender who was part of the U.S. hockey team that won the gold medal at the 1980 Winter Olympics at Lake Placid, New York, U.S. The American victory in the hockey tournament, known as the “miracle on ice,” was one of the greatest surprises in the history of
- Craig, John (British mathematician)
probability and statistics: The probability of causes: In 1699 the British mathematician John Craig used probability to vindicate the truth of scripture and, more idiosyncratically, to forecast the end of time, when, due to the gradual attrition of truth through successive testimonies, the Christian religion would become no longer probable. The Scottish philosopher David Hume, more skeptically,…
- Craig, Sir James (governor general of Canada)
Sir James Craig was a British soldier in the American Revolutionary War who later served as governor-general of Canada (1807–11) and was charged by French-Canadians with conducting a “reign of terror” in Quebec. Craig entered the British army at the age of 15 and was made captain in 1771. In his
- Craig, Sir James Henry (governor general of Canada)
Sir James Craig was a British soldier in the American Revolutionary War who later served as governor-general of Canada (1807–11) and was charged by French-Canadians with conducting a “reign of terror” in Quebec. Craig entered the British army at the age of 15 and was made captain in 1771. In his
- Craig-y-Llyn (mountain, Wales, United Kingdom)
Hirwaun: …uplands of Hirwaun Common and Craig-y-Llyn peak, with an elevation of 1,969 feet (600 metres). Many Iron Age tools and weapons, as well as 6th-century-bce tools and ornaments fashioned from bronze, were found in the area when a small natural lake on the slopes of Craig-y-Llyn was drained to form…
- Craigavon (former district, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom)
Craigavon, former district and borough (1973–2015) established from portions of the former counties of Antrim, Down, and Armagh, now part of the district of Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon, southeastern Northern Ireland. Situated south of Lough (lake) Neagh, it was bordered by the former
- Craigavon (Northern Ireland, United Kingdom)
Craigavon, new town (built after 1966), Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon district, Northern Ireland, lying southwest of Belfast. Craigavon new town was developed under the New Towns Act of 1965 as a commercial, light industrial, and residential centre linking the older towns of Lurgan and
- Craigavon, James Craig, 1st Viscount (prime minister of Northern Ireland)
James Craig, 1st Viscount Craigavon was a soldier and statesman, a leading advocate of maintaining the union between Ireland and Great Britain, and the first prime minister of Northern Ireland (from June 22, 1921, until his death). Craig became a stockbroker, served with an Irish unit in the South
- Craigellachie (British Columbia, Canada)
railroad: Canadian railroads: …a joining of tracks at Craigellachie in British Columbia, Burrard Inlet, north of the Fraser mouth, was selected as a new port and was named for George Vancouver, the British naval captain who conducted the most detailed survey of this coast.
- Craigellachie Bridge (bridge, Scotland, United Kingdom)
bridge: Early designs: The 1814 Craigellachie Bridge, over the River Spey in Scotland, is the oldest surviving metal bridge of Telford’s. Its 45-metre (150-foot) arch has a flat, nearly parabolic profile made up of two curved arches connected by X-bracing. The roadway has a slight vertical curve and is supported…
- Craighill, Rebecca Price (American bacteriologist)
Rebecca Lancefield was an American bacteriologist who created a system of classification of the more than 60 different types of Group A streptococcal bacteria while conducting research at Rockefeller Institute (later Rockefeller University). Lancefield graduated from Wellesley College and in 1918
- Craigie, Sir William Alexander (British lexicographer)
Sir William Alexander Craigie was a Scottish lexicographer and language and literature scholar who was joint editor (1901–33) of The Oxford English Dictionary and chief editor (1923–36) of the four-volume Historical Dictionary of American English. (Read H.L. Mencken’s 1926 Britannica essay on
- Craigslist (corporation)
Craigslist, private corporation operating over the Internet to provide classified advertisements, community information services, and community forums. Most of these listings are restricted to specific locations, which include some 500 cities in 50 countries. Craig’s list was launched in 1995 by
- Crainic, Nichifor (Romanian author)
Romanian literature: Between the wars: …styles can be illustrated by Nichifor Crainic’s religious traditionalist tendency, the programmatic esoterica of Ion Barbu (who was also an internationally renowned mathematician), the influence of French and German lyric poetry on Ion Pillat, and the bitter Symbolist poetry of George Bacovia. After Eminescu, who remained influential throughout the 20th…
- Crainquebille (work by France)
Anatole France: Crainquebille (1903), a comedy in three acts adapted by France from an earlier short story, dramatizes the unjust treatment of a small tradesman and proclaims the hostility toward the bourgeois order that led France eventually to embrace socialism. Toward the end of his life, his…