- Cuff, Sergeant (fictional character)
Sergeant Cuff, fictional character, the detective in Wilkie Collins’s mystery The Moonstone (1868). Like Inspector Bucket in Charles Dickens’s Bleak House, the character of Sergeant Cuff was based upon Inspector Jonathan Whicher, a Scotland Yard detective. The thin, grizzled, and elderly Cuff has a
- Cuffe, Paul (American ship owner, merchant, and Pan-Africanist)
Paul Cuffe was an American shipowner, merchant, and Pan-Africanist who was an influential figure in the 19th-century movement to resettle free black Americans to Africa. He was one of 10 children born to Kofi (or Cuffe) Slocum, a freed slave, and Ruth Moses, a Native American of the Wampanoag
- Cuffee (American enslaved person)
New York slave rebellion of 1741: …identified as a slave named Cuffee, running from the scene of one of the fires.
- Cuffee, Paul (American ship owner, merchant, and Pan-Africanist)
Paul Cuffe was an American shipowner, merchant, and Pan-Africanist who was an influential figure in the 19th-century movement to resettle free black Americans to Africa. He was one of 10 children born to Kofi (or Cuffe) Slocum, a freed slave, and Ruth Moses, a Native American of the Wampanoag
- CUFOS (American organization)
unidentified flying object: Other investigations of UFOs: Hynek founded the Center for UFO Studies (CUFOS), which continues to investigate the phenomenon. Another major U.S. study of UFO sightings was the Advanced Aviation Threat Identification Program (AATIP), a secret project that ran from 2007 to 2012. When the existence of the AATIP was made public in…
- Cufra (oasis, Libya)
Al-Kufrah, oasis group about 30 miles (48 km) long and 12 miles (19 km) wide in southeastern Libya, in an elliptical trough near the centre of the Libyan Desert. Astride ancient caravan routes, the oasis was a raiders’ stronghold until 1895, when it became the headquarters of the Sanūsī, a
- CUG (political party, Georgia)
Georgia: Independent Georgia: …vote, and his party, the Citizens’ Union of Georgia (CUG), won 107 of the parliament’s 231 seats. In legislative elections four years later, the CUG won an absolute majority, and in 2000 Shevardnadze was reelected president with nearly 80 percent of the vote. Accusations that he condoned widespread corruption and…
- Cugat, Xavier (Spanish musician)
Xavier Cugat was a bandleader who introduced Latin American dance music to wide audiences in the United States. Cugat proved a violin prodigy while growing up in Havana, Cuba, earned enough money to finance his family’s move to Brooklyn, N.Y., and accompanied tenor Enrico Caruso on a world tour at
- Cugerni (people)
history of the Low Countries: The Roman period: … to the Campine (Kempenland), the Cugerni to the Xanten district, and the Tungri to part of the area originally inhabited by the Eburones.
- Cugnot, Nicolas-Joseph (French engineer)
Nicolas-Joseph Cugnot was a French military engineer who designed and built the world’s first true automobile—a huge, heavy, steam-powered tricycle. (Read James Watt’s 1819 Britannica essay on the steam engine.) After serving in the Austrian army in the Seven Years’ War, Cugnot returned to Paris in
- cui (rodent)
guinea pig, (Cavia porcellus), a domesticated species of South American rodent belonging to the cavy family (Caviidae). It resembles other cavies in having a robust body with short limbs, large head and eyes, and short ears. The feet have hairless soles and short sharp claws. There are four toes on
- Cui Hao (Chinese adviser)
Wei dynasty: …at the Wei court was Cui Hao (381–450), who introduced Chinese administrative methods and the penal code to the Wei. As the Wei economy started to depend more and more on farming and less on herding and raiding, the lifestyle of the tribesmen became more sedentary. And then, as happened…
- Cui Zizhong (Chinese artist)
Chinese painting: Ming dynasty (1368–1644): …Hongshou and the Beijing artist Cui Zizhong initiated the first major revival of figure painting since Song times, possibly as a result of their encounters with Western art. Perspective and shading effects appear among other naturalistic features in the art of this generation, along with a newfound interest in saturated…
- Cui, César (Russian composer)
César Cui was a Russian composer of operas, songs, and piano music. He was a music critic and military engineer who, with Aleksandr Borodin, Mily Balakirev, Modest Mussorgsky, and Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov, made up the group known as The Five. Cui was the son of a French officer, taken prisoner
- Cui, César Antonovich (Russian composer)
César Cui was a Russian composer of operas, songs, and piano music. He was a music critic and military engineer who, with Aleksandr Borodin, Mily Balakirev, Modest Mussorgsky, and Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov, made up the group known as The Five. Cui was the son of a French officer, taken prisoner
- Cuiabá (Brazil)
Cuiabá, city, capital of Mato Grosso estado (state), southwestern Brazil. It lies along the Cuiabá River, a tributary of the Paraguay River, at 541 feet (165 metres) above sea level. Founded by gold hunters in 1719, the settlement was given the status of a town in 1727 and a city in 1818.
- Cuiabá River (river, Brazil)
Cuiabá River, river, central Mato Grosso state, Brazil, rising northeast of Rosário Oeste, between the basins of the Amazon and Paraguay rivers, and flowing for 300 miles (480 km) south-southwest to join the Saõ Lourenço River. These two rivers’ combined courses, sometimes called the Cuiabá,
- Cuiacius, Jacobus (French jurist and scholar)
Jacques Cujas was a French jurist and classical scholar whose work on Roman law was part of the humanist revival of classical culture. A teacher at the universities of Valence and Bourges, Cujas attracted outstanding students from all over Europe, among them the Dutch classical scholar Joseph
- Cuicatec (people)
Cuicatec, Mesoamerican Indian people of northeastern Oaxaca in southern Mexico. They live in a hilly area, partly arid and partly rainy; their neighbours are the Mazatec to the north, the Chinantec to the east, and the Mixtec to the south. The language of the Cuicatec, which also is called
- Cuicuilco (archaeological site, Mexico)
pre-Columbian civilizations: Early religious life: …plateau is the pyramid of Cuicuilco, near Mexico City. In fact, it is rather a truncated cone, with a stone core; the rest is made of sun-dried brick with a stone facing. It shows the main features of the Mexican pyramids as they were developed in later times. It was…
- Cuíg Cuígí (ancient kingdom, Ireland)
Ireland: Political and social organization: …of tuatha, known as the Five Fifths (Cuíg Cuígí), occurred about the beginning of the Christian era. These were Ulster (Ulaidh), Meath (Midhe), Leinster (Laighin), Munster (Mumhain), and Connaught (Connacht).
- Cuijp, Aelbert (Dutch painter)
Aelbert Cuyp was a Dutch painter of the Baroque period who is known for his peaceful landscapes of the Dutch countryside, distinguished for the poetic use of light and atmosphere. After the death of his father, portraitist Jacob Gerritszoon Cuyp, soon after 1651 and of his mother in 1654, Aelbert
- Cuijp, Benjamin Gerritszoon (Dutch painter)
Benjamin Gerritsz. Cuyp was a Dutch artist who painted landscapes, genre scenes, battle pieces, and religious subjects in a Baroque style that appears to have been influenced by Rembrandt’s dramatic use of chiaroscuro. His nephew Aelbert Cuyp and his uncle Jacob Gerritszoon Cuyp were both noted
- Cuijp, Jacob Gerritszoon (Dutch painter)
Jacob Gerritsz. Cuyp was a Dutch Baroque painter, best known for his portraits. He broke with the family tradition of glass painting and painted historical pictures, portraits, and animal subjects. A man of substance in Dordrecht, he held various offices in the painters’ guild there. He probably
- Cuil Raithin (Northern Ireland, United Kingdom)
Coleraine, town and former district (1973–2015) astride the former counties of Antrim and Londonderry, now part of the Causeway Coast and Glens district, Northern Ireland. Coleraine town is located near the mouth of the River Bann. It is the administrative centre of the Causeway Coast and Glens
- Cuilapa (Guatemala)
Cuilapa, city, southeastern Guatemala. The city lies in a bend of the southward-flowing Los Esclavos River on the southern flanks of the central highlands at an elevation of 2,916 feet (889 metres). In 1913 Cuilapa was destroyed by an earthquake; rebuilding was completed in 1920. Cuilapa is known
- Cuillin Hills (mountain range, Scotland, United Kingdom)
Cuillin Hills, mountain range, south-central portion of the Atlantic coastal island of Skye, Inner Hebrides island group, Highland council area, Scotland. The Cuillin Hills are among the steepest mountains in the United Kingdom and include 15 peaks above 3,000 feet (900 metres). There are two main
- Cuillins, the (mountain range, Scotland, United Kingdom)
Cuillin Hills, mountain range, south-central portion of the Atlantic coastal island of Skye, Inner Hebrides island group, Highland council area, Scotland. The Cuillin Hills are among the steepest mountains in the United Kingdom and include 15 peaks above 3,000 feet (900 metres). There are two main
- cuirass (armor)
cuirass, body armour that protects the torso of the wearer above the waist or hips. Originally it was a thick leather garment covering the body from neck to waist, consisting of a breastplate and a backpiece fastened together with straps and buckles and a gorget, a collar protecting the throat. In
- Cúirt an Mheadhon Oidhche (work by Merriman)
Celtic literature: Late period: …Oidhche (written 1780, published 1904; The Midnight Court) by Brian Merriman, a schoolmaster from County Clare. Considered the greatest comic poem in the Irish language, it satirizes the aisling tradition and offers a bawdy critique of sexual conventions, including priestly celibacy and marriages between the very old and the young…
- Cuisian Stage (geology)
Cuisian Stage, subdivision of Eocene rocks and time (the Eocene Epoch began about 54,000,000 years ago and lasted about 16,000,000 years) in western Europe. The Cuisian Stage, which precedes the Lutetian Stage and follows the Ypresian Stage, was named for Cuise, Fr., where the Cuisian consists
- Cuisinart (electric appliance)
food processor: …Verdon’s machines to produce the Cuisinart. The widespread success of the Cuisinart following its exhibition in Chicago in 1973 led a number of other manufacturers to design competing models, and hundreds of thousands of food processors were sold in the late 1970s.
- cuisine
cuisine, the foods and methods of preparation traditional to a region or population. The major factors shaping a cuisine are climate, which in large measure determines the raw materials that are available to the cook; economic conditions, which regulate trade in delicacies and imported foodstuffs;
- Cuisinier françois, Le (work by La Varenne)
gastronomy: The Italian influence on France: It was called Le Cuisinier françois (1652) and was written by La Varenne, an outstanding chef, who is believed to have learned to cook in Marie de Médicis’ kitchens. La Varenne’s cookbook was the first to present recipes in alphabetical order, and the book included the first instructions…
- Cuitláhuac (Aztec ruler)
Cuitláhuac was the 10th Aztec ruler, who succeeded his brother Montezuma II in June 1520. Cuitláhuac rebelled against the Spanish occupation of Tenochtitlán, decimating Hernán Cortés’ forces in their retreat from the city on the noche triste (Spanish: “sad night”) of June 30, 1520. During his
- Cuitlatec language
Cuitlatec language, a language isolate (i.e., a language with no known relatives) that was spoken in the Mexican state of Guerrero. It became extinct in the 1960s with the death of Juana Can, the last known speaker. It is poorly documented, though brief descriptive materials exist. Proposals have
- Cuito (Angola)
Kuito, town (founded 1890), central Angola. It is the chief trade and market centre of the fertile Bié Plateau and processes rice and other grains, coffee, meat, and beeswax. The town suffered much damage in the civil war following Angola’s independence in 1975 and was almost totally destroyed in
- Cuitzeo, Lake (lake, Mexico)
Lake Cuitzeo, lake located in Michoacán state, south-central Mexico. It is on the Mesa Central at 5,974 feet (1,821 metres) above sea level and is about 31 miles (50 km) long. The lake level rises and falls depending upon rainfall, but it generally covers an area of approximately 160 square miles
- cuius regio, eius religio (political and religious doctrine)
history of Europe: The Aufklärung: …reflecting the acceptance of the cuius regio, eius religio principle; it reduced the scope for internal conflicts, which elsewhere bred doubts about authority. In translating conservative attitudes into political doctrines, the contribution of the lawyers and the nature of the law they taught were crucial. In place of the moral…
- Cujacius, Jacobus (French jurist and scholar)
Jacques Cujas was a French jurist and classical scholar whose work on Roman law was part of the humanist revival of classical culture. A teacher at the universities of Valence and Bourges, Cujas attracted outstanding students from all over Europe, among them the Dutch classical scholar Joseph
- Cujas, Jacques (French jurist and scholar)
Jacques Cujas was a French jurist and classical scholar whose work on Roman law was part of the humanist revival of classical culture. A teacher at the universities of Valence and Bourges, Cujas attracted outstanding students from all over Europe, among them the Dutch classical scholar Joseph
- Cujaus, Jacques (French jurist and scholar)
Jacques Cujas was a French jurist and classical scholar whose work on Roman law was part of the humanist revival of classical culture. A teacher at the universities of Valence and Bourges, Cujas attracted outstanding students from all over Europe, among them the Dutch classical scholar Joseph
- Cujavia (region, Poland)
Kujawy, lowland region of central Poland. It is bounded on the northeast by the Vistula River between Włocławek and Bydgoszcz and on the southwest by the Noteć River. First appearing in written sources in 1136, the name Kujawy referred then to the area closest to the Vistula and only later was used
- Cujo (novel by King)
Stephen King: Other novels: (1980; films 1984 and 2022); Cujo (1981; film 1983); The Running Man (1982; film 1987); Christine (1983; film 1983); Thinner (1984; film 1996); It (1986; TV miniseries 1990; films 2017 and 2019); Misery (1987; film 1990);
- Cujo (film by Teague [1983])
Stephen King: Other novels: …1984 and 2022); Cujo (1981; film 1983); The Running Man (1982; film 1987); Christine (1983; film 1983); Thinner (1984; film 1996); It (1986; TV miniseries 1990; films 2017 and 2019); Misery (1987; film 1990); The Tommyknockers (1987; TV
- Cukierman, Yitzhak (Polish hero)
Yitzhak Zuckerman was a hero of Jewish resistance to the Nazis in World War II and one of the few survivors of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Zuckerman was active in a federation of young Zionist organizations, Hehalutz, and early favoured armed resistance to Nazi depredations against the Jews. He was
- Cukor, George (American film director)
George Cukor was an American motion-picture director who produced films of high quality for 50 years, combining his skill in working with actors, especially actresses, and his careful attention to details. Cukor was born in Manhattan to a family of Hungarian Jewish descent. He took an early
- Cukor, George Dewey (American film director)
George Cukor was an American motion-picture director who produced films of high quality for 50 years, combining his skill in working with actors, especially actresses, and his careful attention to details. Cukor was born in Manhattan to a family of Hungarian Jewish descent. He took an early
- Cul-de-Sac Plain (plain, Haiti)
Haiti: Relief and drainage: …northern boundary to the narrow Cul-de-Sac Plain, which is immediately adjacent to Port-au-Prince and includes the brackish Lake Saumâtre on the Dominican border.
- Cūḷāmaṇĭ (work by Tōlāmoḻittēvar)
South Asian arts: Epics: …of Cīvakaṉ”) by Tiruttakkatēvar, and Cūḷāmaṇĭ (“The Crest Jewel”) by Tōlāmoḻittēvar. The last three works depict Jaina kings and their ideals of the good life, nonviolence, and the attainment of salvation through self-sacrifice. They are also characterized by excellent descriptions of city and country and by a mixture of supernatural…
- Cūlavaṃsa (historical chronicle)
Cūlavaṃsa, (Pāli: “Little Chronicle”), Ceylonese historical chronicle that details the history of the island of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) from about the 4th to the 16th century, considered a sequel to the earlier Mahāvaṃsa (“Great Chronicle”). The entire Cūlavaṃsa is written in Pāli, the sacred
- Culbertson, Ely (American bridge player)
Ely Culbertson was an American authority on the card game known as Contract Bridge who later abandoned the game to work for world peace. Culbertson was the son of an American oil explorer and lived as a boy in Russia. He was educated in Geneva and Paris. In his youth he was a revolutionary agent in
- Culcitaceae (plant family)
fern: Annotated classification: Family Culcitaceae Stems variously prostrate and creeping or loosely ascending but usually not trunklike, hairy, sometimes with a mantle of roots; leaves large (up to 3 metres [almost 10 feet]), 4 to 5 times pinnately compound; sori marginal on the underside of the segments, the indusia…
- Culebra Cut (channel, Panama)
Gaillard Cut, artificial channel in Panama forming a part of the Panama Canal. It is an excavated gorge, more than 8 miles (13 km) long, across the Continental Divide. It is named for David du Bose Gaillard, the American engineer who supervised much of its construction. The unstable nature of the
- Culebra Island (island, Puerto Rico)
Culebra Island, island, Puerto Rico, 20 miles (30 km) east of Puerto Rico island and 15 miles west of St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. The island fronts north on the Atlantic Ocean and south and west on Vieques Sound, which connects the Atlantic with the Caribbean Sea. About 7 miles (11 km) long and 2
- Culebras (archaeological site, Peru)
pre-Columbian civilizations: The Late Preceramic: One site, at Culebras, was a large village on a terraced hillside, with semi-subterranean houses whose underground parts were lined with basalt blocks and whose upper parts were built of lighter materials such as adobe blocks. They originally had hard clay floors, and some had guinea-pig hutches consisting…
- culepla (reptile)
brown tree snake, (Boiga irregularis), slender, mildly venomous, primarily arboreal snake of family Colubridae that is considered to be one of the most aggressive invasive species in the world. The brown tree snake is native only to the islands immediately west of Wallace’s Line and to New Guinea
- culet (cut gems)
facet: …to the girdle is the culet. Certain stones, such as mogul cut diamonds (egg-shaped jewels faceted without regard for symmetry or brilliancy) or drop cut stones, have neither a girdle, a crown, nor a pavilion. In others, the crown and the pavilion are identical—e.g., in baguette cut stones.
- Culex (mosquito genus)
mosquito: Culex mosquitoes: The genus Culex is a carrier of viral encephalitis and, in tropical and subtropical climates, of filariasis. It holds its body parallel to the resting surface and its proboscis is bent downward relative to the surface. The wings, with scales on the veins and the margin, are…
- culha (gourd)
mate: The gourds, called mates or culhas, are often decorated and are sometimes silver mounted or covered with leather. Mate can also be prepared in similar vessels made out of wood or metal. The drink is often served plain and is sometimes flavoured with milk, sugar, herbs, coffee grounds,…
- Culhua-Mexica (people)
Aztec, Nahuatl-speaking people who in the 15th and early 16th centuries ruled a large empire in what is now central and southern Mexico. The name Aztec is derived from Aztlán (variously translated as “White Land,” “Land of White Herons,” or “Place of Herons”), an allusion to their origins, probably
- Culhwch ac Olwen (Welsh literature)
Culhwch and Olwen, (c. 1100), Welsh prose work that is one of the earliest known Arthurian romances. It is a lighthearted tale that skillfully incorporates themes from mythology, folk literature, and history. The earliest form of the story survives in an early 14th-century manuscript called The
- Culhwch and Olwen (Welsh literature)
Culhwch and Olwen, (c. 1100), Welsh prose work that is one of the earliest known Arthurian romances. It is a lighthearted tale that skillfully incorporates themes from mythology, folk literature, and history. The earliest form of the story survives in an early 14th-century manuscript called The
- Culiacán (Mexico)
Culiacán, city, capital of Sinaloa estado (state), northwestern Mexico. Situated on the Culiacán River about 50 miles (80 km) inland from the Gulf of California, it lies on a small coastal plain, about 200 feet (60 metres) above sea level. To the east rises the lofty Sierra Madre Occidental.
- Culiacán River (river, Mexico)
Mexico: Drainage of Mexico: Fuerte, and Culiacán rivers have been dammed and support vast irrigated fields. Aridity in Baja California and the porous limestones that underlie the Yucatán Peninsula cause those regions to be virtually devoid of permanent surface streams.
- Culicidae (insect)
mosquito, (family Culicidae), any of approximately 3,500 species of familiar insects, some of which are important in public health because of the bloodsucking habits of the females. Mosquitoes are known to transmit serious diseases, including yellow fever, Zika fever, malaria, filariasis, and
- culinary foam (food)
Ferran Adrià: …emerge from Adrià’s kitchen was culinary foam, which he originally observed as a by-product of inflating tomatoes with a bicycle pump and then discovered he could create through a more-refined process by spraying out of a nitrous oxide canister the mixture of a main ingredient, such as raspberries or mushrooms,…
- Culion Island (island, Philippines)
Culion Island, island, one of the Calamian Group, west-central Philippines. The island is the site of Culion Reservation, a therapeutic community founded in 1906 for the treatment of leprosy (Hansen’s disease). Rice and coconuts are grown on the island. Culion, the main settlement, is located on
- Culkin, Kieran (American actor)
Kieran Culkin is an American actor known for portraying distasteful yet sympathetic characters, such as Igby Slocumb in the movie Igby Goes Down (2002) and Dennis Ziegler in the Broadway play This Is Our Youth (2014). The brother of famed child actor Macaulay Culkin, Kieran gained mainstream
- Culkin, Macaulay (American actor)
Macaulay Culkin is an American actor who rose to fame in John Hughes’s 1990 box office hit Home Alone and quickly became one of the most famous child actors of the 1990s. In his teens he took a step back from acting, and he reemerged in his early 20s to act occasionally and to pursue other creative
- Cullen, Countee (American poet)
Countee Cullen was an American poet, one of the finest of the Harlem Renaissance. Reared by a woman who was probably his paternal grandmother, Countee at age 15 was unofficially adopted by the Reverend F.A. Cullen, minister of Salem M.E. Church, one of Harlem’s largest congregations. He won a
- Cullen, Countee Porter (American poet)
Countee Cullen was an American poet, one of the finest of the Harlem Renaissance. Reared by a woman who was probably his paternal grandmother, Countee at age 15 was unofficially adopted by the Reverend F.A. Cullen, minister of Salem M.E. Church, one of Harlem’s largest congregations. He won a
- Cullen, Edward (fictional character)
Stephenie Meyer: …Swan and her vampire boyfriend, Edward Cullen. Meyer described her vampires as “very light”—sensitive, thoughtful, even beautiful figures rather than blood-guzzling predators. Some, like Edward and his family, do not drink human blood. They also do not turn into bats or sleep in coffins, and they travel abroad in daylight.…
- Cullen, Paul (Irish cardinal)
Paul Cullen was the archbishop of Dublin who became the first Irish cardinal. Educated at the Quaker School, Carlow, Cullen joined the Urban College of Propaganda, Rome, and was ordained priest in 1829. He became rector of the Irish National College in Rome. During the Mazzini revolution of 1848 he
- Cullen, William (Scottish physician and professor)
William Cullen was a Scottish physician and professor of medicine, best known for his innovative teaching methods. Cullen received his early education at Hamilton Grammar School, in the town where he was born and where his father, a lawyer, was employed by the duke of Hamilton. In 1726 Cullen went
- Cullen-Harrison Act (United States [1933])
Eighteenth Amendment: Roosevelt signed the Cullen-Harrison Act, which amended the Volstead Act, permitting the manufacturing and sale of low-alcohol beer and wines (up to 3.2 percent alcohol by volume). Nine months later, on December 5, 1933, federal prohibition was repealed with the ratification of the Twenty-first Amendment (which allowed prohibition…
- cullet (waste glass)
industrial glass: Cullet: In addition to the mineral ingredients such as those listed above, a glass batch traditionally consists of 25 to 60 percent cullet. Cullet is crushed rejected glass, generally of the same composition as the mineral mixture, that is included because its early melting in…
- Cullin, Michael (American retailer)
marketing: Supermarkets: …in the United States by Michael Cullin in 1930. His King Kullen chain of large-volume food stores was so successful that it encouraged the major food-store chains to convert their specialty stores into supermarkets. When compared with the conventional independent grocer, supermarkets generally offered greater variety and convenience and often…
- Cullinan diamond (gem)
Cullinan diamond, world’s largest gem diamond, which weighed about 3,106 carats in rough form when found in 1905 at the Premier mine in Transvaal, modern-day South Africa. Named for Sir Thomas Cullinan, who had discovered the mine three years earlier, the colourless stone was purchased by the
- Cullinan I (gem)
Great Star of Africa, the largest (530.2 carats) gem cut from the Cullinan
- Cullinan II (gem)
Cullinan diamond: The other diamond—the 317-carat Cullinan II, sometimes called the Second Star of Africa—is the most valuable stone in the Imperial State Crown. The remaining numbered diamonds, Cullinan III–IX, range in weight from 94.4 carats to 4.4 carats. They eventually became part of the British monarch’s personal collection.
- Cullinan, Joseph S. (American businessman)
Texaco Inc.: …founded in Beaumont, Texas, by Joseph S. Cullinan (1860–1937), a former Standard Oil field worker, and Arnold Schlaet (1859–1946), a New York investment manager. Their original design was to buy and refine oil in Texas and sell it to Standard Oil Company interests in the north at a profit, but…
- Cullman (Alabama, United States)
Cullman, city, seat (1877) of Cullman county, on Brindley Mountain, northern Alabama, U.S., about 45 miles (70 km) north of Birmingham. It was founded in 1873 by German settlers led by Johann Gottfried Cullmann. The Cullman area is the top agricultural producer in Alabama, with poultry being most
- Culloden, Battle of (English history)
Battle of Culloden, (April 16, 1746), the last battle of the “Forty-five Rebellion,” when the Jacobites, under Charles Edward, the Young Pretender (“Bonnie Prince Charlie”), were defeated by British forces under William Augustus, duke of Cumberland. Culloden is a tract of moorland in the county of
- Cullum, Jamie (British musician)
Jamie Cullum is a British musician who is known for jazz compositions that are heavily influenced by contemporary popular music. Cullum grew up in Hullavington and—mostly self-taught—began playing in a rock band at age 15. He soon became attracted to jazz and began playing and singing it in bars
- Cullum, John (American actor and singer)
Northern Exposure: …and philosophical; Holling Vincoeur (John Cullum), the lively elderly tavern owner married to the decades-younger former beauty queen and waitress Shelly (Cynthia Geary); and Fleischman’s taciturn Native American receptionist, Marilyn Whirlwind (Elaine Miles). At the heart of the show was Fleischman’s increasing warmth for his icy home and his…
- culm (plant anatomy)
bamboo: …woody ringed stems, known as culms, are typically hollow between the rings (nodes) and grow in branching clusters from a thick rhizome (underground stem). Bamboo culms can attain heights ranging from 10 to 15 cm (about 4 to 6 inches) in the smallest species to more than 40 metres (about…
- Culm Measures (geological formation, England, United Kingdom)
Torridge: …district is dominated by the Culm Measures, dark gray shale with intercollated bands of sandstones and grits. The rocks have been folded along an east-west alignment followed by a number of rivers. The main river, the Torridge, flows from south to north between steep forested slopes; its valley is deep…
- Culm Trench (geological feature, England, United Kingdom)
Europe: Hercynian orogenic belt: …into deeper-water shales of the Culm Trench of southwestern England, within which are found the pillow lavas (aggregates of ovoid masses, resembling pillows), gabbros, and serpentinites of the Lizard ophiolite. In Brittany there is an island arc with lavas and granites that resulted from subduction of the ocean floor. The…
- Culmann, Carl (German engineer)
Carl Culmann was a German engineer whose graphic methods of structural analysis have been widely applied to engineering and mechanics. In 1841 Culmann entered the Bavarian civil service as a cadet bridge engineer with the Hof railway construction division. He was eventually appointed professor of
- Culp, Oveta (United States government official)
Oveta Culp Hobby was an American editor and publisher of the Houston Post (1952–53), the first director of the U.S. Women’s Army Corps (1942–45), and the first secretary of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (1953–55). Culp was educated privately and for a time attended Mary
- Culpeper’s Rebellion (American colonial history)
Culpeper’s Rebellion, (1677–79), early popular uprising against proprietary rule in the Albemarle section of northern Carolina, caused by the efforts of the proprietary government to enforce the British Navigation acts. These trade laws denied the colonists a free market outside England and placed
- Culpeper, John (American colonial governor)
Culpeper’s Rebellion: Led by John Culpeper and George Durant, the rebels imprisoned Miller and other officials, convened a legislature of their own, chose Culpeper governor, and for two years capably exercised all powers and duties of government. Culpeper was finally removed by the proprietors and tried for treason and…
- Culpeper, Nicholas (British author)
herbal: In England these culminated in Nicholas Culpeper’s A Physicall Directory (1649), which was a pseudoscientific pharmacopoeia. The herbals were replaced in the 17th-century by floras, books in which plants were studied for their own sake.
- Culpepper of Thoresway, John Culpepper, 1st Baron (English statesman)
John Colepeper, 1st Baron Colepeper was an English statesman who was an influential counsellor of Charles I during the Civil War and of Charles II in exile. Elected member for Kent in the Long Parliament, he took the popular side, supporting the Earl of Strafford’s attainder and receiving an
- Culper Ring (American intelligence organization)
Culper Spy Ring, American intelligence organization that was put together and managed by Maj. Benjamin Tallmadge for the Continental Army during the American Revolution. It operated in British-controlled New York City from 1778 to 1783. The ring was named for the operational names of two of its
- Culper Spy Ring (American intelligence organization)
Culper Spy Ring, American intelligence organization that was put together and managed by Maj. Benjamin Tallmadge for the Continental Army during the American Revolution. It operated in British-controlled New York City from 1778 to 1783. The ring was named for the operational names of two of its
- Culprit Fay and Other Poems, The (work by Drake)
Joseph Rodman Drake: …his verses in 1835 as The Culprit Fay and Other Poems. The title poem, considered his best, deals with the theme of the fairy lover in a Hudson River setting. The volume also contains two fine nature poems, “Niagara” and “Bronx.” These and other poems appeared in his Life and…
- Culross (Scotland, United Kingdom)
Culross, small picturesque royal burgh (town) in Fife council area and historic county, Scotland, on the northern bank of the Firth of Forth. The burgh has early religious associations with the Celtic saints Serf and Kentigern (5th century). A Cistercian abbey was founded there in 1217, and its
- Culshaw, John Royds (British record producer)
John Royds Culshaw was a British record producer who publicized and shaped the recording of classical music during the long-playing- and stereo-record eras. Culshaw’s recording of the complete cycle of Richard Wagner’s Ring, with Georg Solti conducting, was a milestone in stereo technique and won